Fraudsters now exploiting e-Commerce sector at scalesa similar to Jamtara banking scams: Report
New Delhi [India], April 30 (ANI): Organised fraud networks are now systematically targeting online marketplaces, with coordinated groups exploiting platform systems at scale, mirroring patterns once seen in banking fraud, according to a new study.
An analysis of 70 million marketplace users by AI- powered risk decisioning platform Bureau, revealed that coordinated groups are now exploiting online systems at a scale similar to the Jamtara banking scams.
The report identified that marketplace fraud today operates through highly coordinated clusters. It highlighted that "an average of 1 in 6 risky devices having more than 10+ accounts associated with the same device, which is typically a sign of a 'farm'...At the core of these patterns is device farming."
A device farm is where multiple phones are operated together, acting as the operational backbone of these fraud networks. It allows fraudsters to run and control dozens, sometimes hundreds, of accounts simultaneously, switching between them at speeds no individual user can match.
In total, the report mapped 256 fraud clusters comprising approximately 45,000 accounts linked to just 9,000 devices. This infrastructure allowed automated scripts to perform high-frequency activities, with some individual accounts recording more than 50 instances of activity within a single hour.
The scale of automation is further evidenced by significant location anomalies. The report highlighted instances where a single account logs in from Gujarat and Bengaluru within a 30-minute window.
Such patterns indicated automated account cycling rather than standard human behavior. As per the report, these activities are particularly concentrated in major hubs including Delhi, Bengaluru, and Noida. Some platforms recorded up to 15 times the typical share of users operating multiple accounts, indicating that incentive structures can directly influence fraud volume.
Beyond incentive fraud, the report detailed how return abuse has become systematic. It explaied that fraudsters frequently order high-value items only to return empty packages or counterfeit goods.
Bureau currently uses device and network intelligence to protect nearly 300 million devices across various sectors, including banking, fintech, and gaming, to detect these fraud rings before they can initiate significant financial damage. (ANI)
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