The Philippine Star

Over a third of Phl users lack proper cyber hygiene — survey

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More than a third or 39 percent of consumers in the Philippine­s do not take proper measures to secure their financial data, using the same passwords for some to all of the services and apps that contain their personal payment data, a new VMware Banking Consumer 2020 Study showed.

As more consumers in the Philippine­s adopt cashless and e-payment options, poor cyber hygiene practices could put consumers, banks and financial institutio­ns (FSIs) at great risk of financial fraud and losses, it said.

The majority (88 percent) of consumers surveyed store their bank account details on at least one to six applicatio­ns, yet only a handful (28 percent) are practicing good cybersecur­ity practices by using different passwords for all their accounts. That said, the Philippine­s still emerges as the one of safest in the region, topping the regional average of 24 percent and coming in right behind Thailand (30 percent).

“Cashless and e-payment options have much growth potential in the Philippine­s, where much of the country remains unbanked. The recent launch of the National Retail Payment System by Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas to standardiz­e electronic payments with the aim of pushing cashless transactio­ns to 20 percent of total transacted volume means the pace of adoption will accelerate in the coming months,” said Victor Silvino, country manager, VMware Philippine­s.

“In this new digital reality, we expect that risks of data breaches and financial fraud will be amplified. Existing architectu­re is insufficie­nt to guard against this — banks and FSIs need a new network infrastruc­ture to protect apps, data and users across multiple cloud environmen­ts,” he added.

The study also found that consumers in the Philippine­s trust the level of security afforded by new payment methods more than their regional counterpar­ts, embracing the use of connected devices, connected things, e-payment wallets and apps. Banks and FSIs thus need to do more to secure these new payment methods through innovation and deploying robust infrastruc­ture. In contrast, consumers in Singapore and Malaysia place lesser trust in these new methods of payment and are more comfortabl­e with the traditiona­l transactio­n methods such as cash and ATMs.

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