Govt orders tech giants to act on rising scam messages


The island state’s police have ordered Apple and Google to prevent the spoofing of government agencies on their messaging platforms, the home affairs ministry said.

The order under the city-state’s Online Criminal Harms Act came after the police observed scams on Apple’s iMessage and Google Messages purporting to be from companies such as the local postal service SingPost.

In September, the city-state’s government threatened to impose fines on Meta Platforms if it did not introduce measures like facial recognition to help curb impersonation scams on Facebook, including those invol­ving key government office hol­ders.

While government agencies have registered with a local SMS registry so only they can send messages with the “gov.sg” name, this does not currently apply to the iMessage and Google Messages platforms.

“Members of the public may assume that messages they receive from accounts claiming to be from ‘gov.sg’ on iMessage or Google Messages are legitimate because messages sent through iMessage and Google Messages appear alongside and are not easily distinguishable from SMSes,” the police said yesterday.

Under the order, Google and Apple will need to prevent accounts and group chats from displaying names which spoof “gov.sg” and other Singapore govern­ment agencies, or filter such messages out.

The home affairs ministry said Apple and Google have committed to complying with the order, and they urged the public to update their mobile apps to ensure that the latest safeguards are in place. — Reuters

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Aseanplus News

Govt intensifies fraud crackdown
Chinese sea captain denies damaging Baltic Sea cables
Travellers brace crowds, long journeys to see loved ones
A post-Hasina test of democracy
Doubts swirl over Thai vote tally
French government alerts prosecutor to diplomat with Epstein ties
China becomes Brazil’s biggest vehicle exporter in January, surpassing Argentina
'Due process must be respected': Anwar defends Azam Baki amid RM800,000 shares controversy
Former Samsung Electronics vice-president sentenced to 3 years’ jail for leaking company secrets
Asean Climate Forum: Malaysia in discussion with Indonesia over coal supply, says DPM Fadillah

Others Also Read