SINGAPORE: If a new framework proposed by the authorities on Wednesday (Oct 25) is implemented, financial institutions could bear the full losses incurred by victims of digitally-enabled phishing scams, should the institutions be found to have breached anti-scam obligations.
The proposed Shared Responsibility Framework (SRF) for phishing scams was unveiled in a joint consultation paper published by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) and the Infocomm Media Development Authority (IMDA).
The paper, which outlines a “waterfall approach”, proposes that responsibility for losses cascades from financial institutions, to telephone companies (telcos) if the phishing scam was perpetrated via SMS - and finally to consumers - if these companies fail to meet their obligations as set out in the framework.
In the consultation paper, MAS and IMDA said the proposed framework will only cover digitally-enabled phishing scams with a “clear Singapore nexus” for now.
This means that any entities impersonated in phishing scams should either be Singapore-based, or entities based overseas that offer their services to Singapore residents.