By Lori Enos and Rebecca Sausner E-Commerce Times
04/25/01 6:29 PM PT
Despite the procedural difficulties of combating online fraud,
government and consumer agencies around the world have been
working to instill consumer confidence in cross-border e-commerce.
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The United States and 12 other countries have joined
forces to fight cross-border Internet fraud with the launch
Tuesday of a Web site that takes consumer complaints in four languages.
The International Marketing Supervision Network
(IMSN), a group of 13 industrialized nations,
said that the Econsumer.gov
site will take complaints
about Internet fraud that originate outside the
victim's home country and pass them on to the
appropriate law enforcement officials in the
participating countries.
"The Internet offers consumers access to goods,
services and information from around the
world," FTC
chairman Robert Pitofsky said. "But the borderless nature of the marketplace
can also frustrate governments' ability to protect consumers."
According to Pitofsky, the Econsumer.gov site
will "allow countries to work together to make
the Internet safer for consumers across the globe."
Getting ID'ed
The Econsumer.gov site will be an extension of the FTC's Consumer Sentinel network,
a database of consumer complaint data. However, Consumer Sentinel,
which received more than 100,000 fraud
complaints in 2000, is only equipped to handle
complaints in English.
"With the Sentinel site, we get about 50,000
complaints every month on the consumer side,"
FTC Bureau of Consumer Protection assistant director Betsy Broder told the E-Commerce Times.
"We share this
among domestic law enforcement agencies and with law
enforcement in Canada and Australia. Econsumer.gov
takes that one step further."
Added Broder: "These days, it's just as easy to order something on
the Internet from France as it is from New York. I may
want to know what my protections are (in) dealing with this
cross-border commerce. The Econsumer.gov site makes
me a more savvy and aware consumer."
The most common Internet fraud complaint received by
Consumer Sentinel last year related to identity theft,
which made up 23 percent of complaints.
Two-Faced
The new Web site has both a public and a private face. The
consumer site -- which is available in English, Spanish, French
and German -- contains information about consumer protection
laws and agencies in the participating countries.
When a consumer files a complaint online at Econsumer.gov, the
information is logged into the database and shared through a
password-protected site with consumer protection law
enforcement agencies that have signed a confidentiality
agreement.
"We're seeing enough cross-border fraud to know that this will
be a very helpful tool," FTC Commissioner Mozelle Thompson said
in media reports. "This will send a clear message to those
unscrupulous parts of the public that they can't hide from us
just because we're on different sides of a border."
In addition to the U.S., the following countries are
participating in the project: Australia, Canada, Denmark,
Finland, Hungary, Mexico, New Zealand, Norway, South Korea,
Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom.
Promises, Promises
Although Econsumer.gov gives aggrieved consumers
a place to register their complaint, it does not
promise that each complaint will be specifically
addressed.
"Although your complaint
may be accessible to government agencies, it may or
may not be accessed by them," reads a disclaimer preceding the complaint form on the
site. "Many government agencies
bring law enforcement actions to protect the
public-at-large, but do not intervene on behalf of
individual consumers. Other agencies have an
obligation to investigate each complaint. However, you
should not necessarily expect any country to pursue
your complaint on your behalf."
Seal of Approval
Despite the procedural difficulties in combating online fraud,
government and consumer agencies around the world have been
working to instill consumer confidence in cross-border e-commerce.
On Monday, the Better Business Bureau (BBB)
announced that it was cooperating with the Federation of European
Direct Marketing (FEDMA) and the Association of European
Chambers of Commerce and Industry to develop a new
international seal for online businesses that uphold specific
business standards.
The groups said that the new venture will encourage businesses to
adhere to consistent standards, no matter what country they are
located in, and will promote the development of cross-border
e-commerce by reducing consumer confusion over the
varying consumer protection standards.
Europeans Crack Down on $3.9B Internet Banking Scam April 12, 2001
According to Jon Merrett of the International Chamber of Commerce,
Internet banking scams 'could rock the
trust that the banking, finance and insurance industries are built on.'