EU agrees on new rules for online fraud protection


A person uses a mobile phone to record images of the Brandenburg Gate as it is illuminated during the Festival of Lights, in Berlin, Germany October 6, 2023. REUTERS/Fabrizio Bensch

BRUSSELS (Reuters) -EU member states and the European Parliament have agreed on new rules to force banks and other payment service providers to better protect their customers against online fraud, hidden fees and data leaks, the Parliament said on Thursday.

The new set of rules would make payment service providers liable for covering customers' losses if they fail to implement appropriate fraud prevention mechanisms, and would force them to freeze suspicious transactions.

The rules also give online platforms a responsibility to remove fraudulent ads, as platforms that fail to do so will be liable for the costs banks have made to reimburse their customers for related fraud.

The legislation should give more clarity on payment charges, guarantee better access to cash in rural areas and make it easier for payment providers to receive information from banks.

It would also force banks to ensure access to human customer care and not limit this to chatbots.

The Parliament and member states will have to formally adopt the rules before they come into effect.

(Reporting by Alessandro Parodi, editing by Bart Meijer)

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

Next In Tech News

Meta shares slip after US jury verdicts raise concerns of new legal exposure
Dutch court orders xAI, Grok not to create, distribute non-consensual sex images in Netherlands
Judge dismisses lawsuit by Musk's X Corp accusing advertisers of illegal boycott
European Payments Initiative CEO says Trump fears are boosting its appeal
Apple adds Bosch, Cirrus Logic, others to US manufacturing program, to invest $400 million
Crypto for a home? Coinbase brings token-backed down payments to housing market
Snapchat hit with EU probe into alleged failure to prevent child grooming, illegal goods sales
Pornhub, Stripchat, XNXX, XVideos charged with breaching EU tech rules, risk fines
UK sanctions Cambodia-based scam centre and crypto platform
OpenAI indefinitely pauses plans to release erotic chatbot, FT says

Others Also Read