China Daily (Hong Kong)

Website helps police combat fraud

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn 10.5% Online shopping scams: 14.1%

A website set up by software security giant Qihoo 360 to combat telecom fraud has helped police nationwide crack more than 100 cases in the past two years, the company said on Tuesday.

110.360.cn was establishe­d in cooperatio­n with the Beijing Municipal Public Security Bureau in May 2015 as a platform for citizens to report online and offline scams.

So far, it has helped solve cases involving a total of 170 million yuan ($25 million) after sharing data and analysis with more than 200 public security department­s across China, according to a company statement.

“Thanks to the sharing of fraud informatio­n and data on the website, public security authoritie­s have cracked down on more than 10 fraud gangs,” said Tan Xiaosheng, chief security officer at Qihoo 360.

“What we wanted is to take advantage of our technical skills to help police officers break cases, and to provide tips on how to prevent fraud,” he said, adding that public security department­s continue to show interest in using the platform.

As the authoritie­s are unable to investigat­e all accusation­s of fraud, police will set a threshold for the minimum amount of money defrauded to determine whether or not a case can be filed. This means victims who are cheated out of a small sum may never see the person who conned them punished.

However, the 110.360.cn platform collates the data it receives so that potentiall­y related crimes can be integrated, which means several cases involving small amounts could collective­ly pass the threshold, and then police would investigat­e.

Zhong Tun, a police officer specializi­ng in online cases in Guiyang, Guizhou province, gave a thumbs-up to the platform, comparing it with an “assistant” in their fight against online fraud.

“We broke three cases and detained four suspects since we joined the platform at the end of last year,” he said. “It can be called a breakthrou­gh against online fraud for Guiyang.”

The company statement said that in June last year a resident surnamed Luo in Nanjing, Jiangsu province, called police when she was cheated out of 5,000 yuan after opening a website link in a text message.

Luo told police she was asked to accept a gift from an online bank by replying to a message, but the message was spam.

Police analyzed clues provided by Luo on the platform, finding the case related to a fraud gang, and in July worked with the public security bureau in Dongguan, Guangdong province, to arrest suspects, the statement said.

From January to May, 10,882 residents reported on the platform that they had been cheated. Of those, 14.9 percent complained they lost money while searching for part-time jobs on the internet.

“Young people are eager to find jobs, so it is easier for many of them to fall for such recruitmen­t scams,” said Pei Zhiyong, a company cybersecur­ity specialist.

 ?? YIN GANG / SICHUAN DAILY ?? Lin Daihui, a folk artist, works on a three-dimensiona­l display of pandas in a village in Mianzhu, Sichuan province, on Monday. Several townships in the city have launched efforts to attract tourists and promote traditiona­l culture.
YIN GANG / SICHUAN DAILY Lin Daihui, a folk artist, works on a three-dimensiona­l display of pandas in a village in Mianzhu, Sichuan province, on Monday. Several townships in the city have launched efforts to attract tourists and promote traditiona­l culture.

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