A senior researcher at
RSA
Security has told
vnunet.com
that there is no technological solution for phishing.
Uriel Maimon, senior researcher in the office of the chief technology officer
at RSA, said that technology solutions could never provide a cure for phishing
and online fraud because technical fixes could always be subverted.
Such measures also depend on the end user to operate and, as such, are
vulnerable to error or incompetence.
The only cure is for phishing to move high enough up the political and social
agenda that politicians would fund police to deal with the problem adequately.
It will also be necessary to resolve international legal differences to make
sure that the perpetrators are locked away regardless of their location.
Users are far too accepting of online fraud, according to Maimon, and the
problem will not be solved until this attitude changes.
"It is battered wife syndrome. People need to say 'enough' and insist that
action be taken," he said.
"Governments must apply social pressure. It is done with the drugs trade and
you can see in Thailand what can be done to cut the problems of underage sex in
this way."
Maimon added that the UK's
Serious
Organised Crime Agency is doing a great job but needs more manpower and
greater resources to catch online criminals.
Sentencing also needs to be looked at because criminals get a stiffer prison
sentence for laundering the cash that has been stolen than for stealing it in
the first place.
International action is also vital, according to Maimon, and countries should
be pressured to enforce their own laws.
In some cases phishing gangs were known to be operating in certain towns, but
corrupt local police do not step in because they are on the payroll of the
phishers.
Education is not proving successful either, despite the efforts of some
governments. "Education is possibly the least effective method of stopping
phishing," Maimon told
vnunet.com.
"Education does not deter fraud. All it does is strengthen consumer
confidence and you cannot trust consumers to make the right choices all the
time."
However, education does have a role in telling people about their rights and
what they should expect in the way of protection. In this way pressure would
grow for real change to be made in government.
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