ISACA suggests that cybersecurity professionals are willing to balance benefits with perceived security risks of mobile payments:
- Only 23% believe that mobile payments are secure in keeping personal information safe.
- Nearly half (47%) say mobile payments are not secure.
- At 89%, cash was deemed the most secure payment method, but only 9% prefer to use it.
The global mobile payment transaction market, including Apple Pay, Google Wallet, PayPal and Venmo, will be worth US $2.8 trillion by 2020, according to Future Market Insights.
Survey respondents ranked major vulnerabilities associated with mobile payments:
1. Use of public WiFi (26%)
2. Lost or stolen devices (21%)
3. Phishing/shmishing (phishing attacks via text messages) (18%)
4. Weak passwords (13%)
The most effective way to make mobile payments more secure is using two ways to authenticate their identity (66%), and requiring short-term authentication codes (18%). Less popular was installing phone-based security apps (9%).
“People using mobile payments need to educate themselves so they are making informed choices. You need to know your options, choose an acceptable level of risk, and put a value on your personal information,” said Christos Dimitriadis, Ph.D., international president of ISACA and group director of information security for INTRALOT. “Embrace and educate about new services and technologies.”
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