The news: PayPal rolled out a dynamic, AI-powered scam alert system to protect consumers against fraud for “Friends and Family” transactions.
The system is live globally for PayPal and in the US for Venmo.
Tiered protection: PayPal recognized that frequent, identical push alerts for possible scams makes users less likely to act on the warning.
That’s why it created three warning tiers based on the level of detected threat with escalating actions involved:
- The lowest level of threat alert identifies potential red flags. “Continue Payment” is the highlighted option, with a “Cancel Payment” option below.
- The middle tier alert offers the same red flag warnings. But in this case, “Cancel Payment” is highlighted; otherwise, users can “Accept Risk and Continue.”
- The strongest threat detection tier thwarts the transaction without an option to continue.
Why this matters: GenAI and other tech are making scams easier to deploy and harder to catch.
Using AI for more nuanced threat protection demonstrates awareness that the protections of the past also need to be scaled or innovated with the latest available technologies.
Our take: Rolling out user-facing AI-powered fraud protection alerts increases PayPal’s visibility as a safe financial provider for more than just online checkout at well-known retailers.
Fintechs lag behind traditional banks in reputability around financial safety. AI alerts help PayPal prevent fraudulent transactions that it might not be able to reimburse. These tiered alerts demonstrated PayPal’s best efforts to thwart consumers’ own potential catastrophes, improving customer satisfaction in the process.