Application and Database Design Guide

Application and Database Design Guide

Fraud and Intelligence Systems

Fraud and Intelligence Systems

This chapter provides a background to why Informatica’s approach to identity search and matching supports strong fraud & intelligence systems.

Overview

In data used by Law Enforcement, Intelligence, Fraud and Security systems there is a growing need to support better reliability and availability, more data integration, increasingly diverse data sources and larger volumes of data.
Computer systems must make sure that the highly valuable data that is stored in these systems can in fact be found, despite its error and variation. Similarly the value of the high-end tools of criminal and fraud investigation that provide "link analysis", "data clustering", or "visualization" can be significantly improved if they make use of the very best search and matching algorithms.

Identity data in Fraud and Intelligence Systems

Many aspects of Fraud, Audit, Enforcement, Prevention and Investigation systems depend upon data about the names, addresses and other identification attributes of people and organizations.
All such identification data suffers from unavoidable variation and error. Often the data is out of date or incomplete. Often the entity committing the fraud or perpetrating the crime is in fact trying to defeat existing matching algorithms, by subjecting the identification data to deliberate, abnormal or extreme variation.
In systems which support intelligence and investigation work, databases of potentially relevant incidents and known perpetrators are maintained such that suspicious activity or new incidents can be linked or matched against them, or new patterns discovered.
Such databases require sophisticated indexing and search techniques that cope well with poor quality data, and provide timely and accurate results.

What Search Strategy to Use

Some solutions to the searching and matching requirements of such systems require skilled investigators who know when and how to vary a search or change the search data to cause the system to work more successfully. Boolean based and wild-card searches are an example of these.
A far better solution uses automated search strategies that satisfy all permutations and variations of the search. . . the real solution needs to be designed to find all the candidates regardless of the way the search data was entered, regardless of the quality of the data stored in the database, and regardless of the experience of the user.
Such search strategies must of course provide real-time searching of all name and identity data. On-line usage must satisfy the officer’s or investigator’s need for fast response without any loss of quality of search.
While diligent investigators can use sophisticated search tools well, it is not possible for the average user to spend day after day simply browsing historical data and do a good job selecting candidate matches; even the diligent user can get ineffectual at the job if it is a continuous activity.
To better automate the searching, matching and linking process, it is necessary that computer systems are designed to "mimic" the very best users when choosing amongst the possible matches. In the same way as human operators use names, addresses, dates, identity numbers and other data, the system must be able to use matching algorithms that effectively rank, score or eliminate the candidates.

How well do these Systems have to Match?

When your CIS, CRM, Campaign System, or Call Center system fails to find a customer record that exist, you have an unhappy customer, or a lost opportunity to make profit. In this case, failing to find records that are present has a relatively small penalty.
Software that is good enough for "Duplicate Discovery" in marketing systems, or data warehousing systems will frequently leave undiscovered duplicates in the system the penalty is small enough for organizations to tolerate some failure.
When an insurance company fails to find out that it is doing business with a known perpetrator of fraud; when a Government welfare agency fails to discover that an address has been used for multiple fraudulent welfare applications; when a police officer fails to find out that the person in the car he/she just stopped is a serious threat, the penalties are likely to be large.

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