The Commercial Appeal

Dangers of digital payment services Venmo, Apple Cash lacking in consumer protection

- Sophia Rosenbaum ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK – My desperatio­n to see Ariana Grande in concert created the perfect trap.

Instead of seeing her sing about love and loss, I got sucked into an online ticket scheme that cost me $75 and a big chunk of my pride.

Con artists often get away with scams like these because digital payment services such as Venmo and Apple Cash don’t protect consumers the same way credit cards do. As a rule of thumb, the newer the service, the more likely con artists will target it.

“The regulation­s haven’t caught up with these technology capabiliti­es,” said Krista Tedder, head of fraud management at the advisory firm Javelin Strategy & Research.

With credit cards, a federal law caps your liability at $50, and most companies go further with zero-liability policies. Debit cards typically offer similar protection­s if you report the fraud immediatel­y. In addition, banks go through a series of verifications before letting someone open an account.

But digital payment services work more like cash. When fraud occurs, it’s as though someone took off with your $20 bill.

Because such services aren’t bound by the same regulation­s as credit and debit cards, it’s up to individual companies to offer protection­s.

Experts say Western Union, which has been offering money transfers long before smartphone­s, devotes a team to monitoring and validating transactio­ns. Tedder said Western Union would even call a customer if something looks suspicious.

“They really treat every transactio­n as a potential risk,” Tedder said.

A more recent service, Paypal, offers reimbursem­ents when merchants ship damaged or counterfei­t items, but digital money transfers aren’t covered.

The newest ones, including Apple Cash, are still figuring out how to deal with fraud, experts say. Others, like Facebook’s proposed Libra currency, are on the horizon.

“These payment systems should carry a big red flag that says you’re not protected,” said Avivah Litan, a senior analyst at Gartner. “I never use them because I know of all the perils.”

Western Union and Paypal, which also owns Venmo, declined comment on their fraud-protection policies.

Apple also declined to comment, but offers online tips that warn, “If you’re not sure about their identity, don’t send the payment.”

To be fair, my phone warned me to use Apple Cash only with people I knew, but I ignored that in my desperatio­n to get the tickets. I wrongly assumed that because Apple Cash was drawing money from my debit card account, I’d be protected if anything went wrong.

As I looked for tickets online for Grande’s sold-out show in September, some of the people I spoke to clearly were scammers: They wouldn’t send pictures of their tickets. Their social media account seemed too new to be real.

But one person had a plausible story about just wanting to get some money back for a show he couldn’t attend. We talked twice through a Facebook Messenger call, which I found comforting, though my partner later pointed out it was a false sense of security.

The biggest red flag I ignored was the scammer’s insistence on using Apple Cash, a payment method I was unfamiliar with. Launched in 2017, Apple Cash lets iphone users send money to each other through Apple’s Messages app. Money you send comes out of your bank account. Money you get can be spent at merchants that take Apple Pay or moved back to a bank account.

Five minutes after I sent $75 through Apple Cash, the scammer’s Facebook account disappeare­d, and so did all my ways of contacting him.

Since then, I’ve felt guilty and embarrasse­d that I fell for it, angry that companies aren’t protecting me and sad that I didn’t get to go to the concert.

It’s not clear how widespread these scams are. The Department of Justice found only 15% of all fraud victims report it to law enforcemen­t.

Tedder said that if more people reported these scams, it could better inform government agencies tasked with tracking, and in turn, creating solutions and policies for these types of crimes.

There are some hopeful developmen­ts. Apple has partnered with Goldman Sachs for an Apple-branded credit card, which some experts say may put pressure on Apple to get more serious about protecting its consumers on other services like Apple Cash.

 ?? JENNY KANE/AP ?? Experts warn that digital wallet services such as Apple Cash and Venmo are prime targets for scammers.
JENNY KANE/AP Experts warn that digital wallet services such as Apple Cash and Venmo are prime targets for scammers.
 ?? CHRIS PIZZELLO/INVISION/AP ?? Associated Press reporter Sophia Rosenbaum was scammed trying to buy Ariana Grande concert tickets using Apple Cash.
CHRIS PIZZELLO/INVISION/AP Associated Press reporter Sophia Rosenbaum was scammed trying to buy Ariana Grande concert tickets using Apple Cash.

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