The Financial Action Task Force (FATF), the global standard-setter in the fight against money laundering and terrorist financing, has revised its Recommendations after more than two years of efforts by member countries. The Recommendations are used by more than 180 governments to combat these crimes. The revisions, made with inputs from governments, the private sector and civil society, provide authorities with a stronger framework to act against criminals and address new threats to the international financial system.
The revised FATF Recommendations now fully integrate counter-terrorist financing measures with anti-money laundering controls, introduce new measures to counter the financing of the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, and they will better address the laundering of the proceeds of corruption and tax crimes. They also strengthen the requirements for higher risk situations and allow countries to take a more targeted risk-based approach.
For more information, refer to the FATF webpage on “International Standards on Combating Money Laundering and the Financing of Terrorism & Proliferation” and read the press release and the latest 127-page publication on The FATF Recommendations (February 2012).
Monday, February 20, 2012
Monday, February 6, 2012
Cybercrime: Protecting Against the Growing Threat
In December 2011, PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) issued a report called Cybercrime: Protecting Against the Growing Threat. This global economic crime survey report is divided into two sections: 1) Cybercrime – its impact on organizations, their awareness of the crime and what they are doing to combat the risks; and 2) Fraud, the fraudster and the defrauded – the types of economic crime committed, how they are detected, who is committing them and what the repercussions are.
A total of 3,877 respondents from organizations in 78 countries responded to this sixth survey by highlighting the growing threat of cybercrime. Against a backdrop of data losses and theft, computer viruses and hacking, the survey looks at the significance and impact of this new type of economic crime and how it affects businesses worldwide. The key findings from the survey show that:
- Cybercrime now ranks as one of the top four economic crimes.
- Reputational damage resulting from cybercrime is the biggest fear for 40% of respondents.
- 40% of respondents don’t have the capability to detect and prevent cybercrime.
- 56% of respondents said the most serious fraud was an ‘inside job’.
- Senior Executives made up almost half of the respondents who didn’t know if their organization had suffered a fraud.
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