Mobile Money: 5 types of fraud that are weakening the sector (GSMA)

Mobile Money

By 2023, 310 mobile financial services were already active worldwide. Sub-Saharan Africa was home to more than half of these. The continent, which has a low rate of banking access, sees this solution as an asset for financial inclusion, especially in rural areas.

Mobile Money, a money transfer service via mobile phones, is now a recurring target of fraudulent and cybercriminal attacks, laments the Global Mobile Operators Association (GSMA). The service, which has earned its place as a lever for economic growth for many telecom operators such as Orange, MTN, Safaricom, and Airtel since 2007, and is a flagship solution for financial inclusion in Africa, is experiencing an increase in these attacks, according to 84% of professionals in the Mobile Money ecosystem surveyed by GSMA. These are people in middle or senior management positions with in-depth knowledge of—and experience with—Mobile Money fraud.

In its study of 34 countries in Africa, Asia and Latin America, published in March 2024, the Association indicates that five main types of threats against Mobile Money have been identified in order of importance:

Identity theft

Impersonating another person, real or not, and/or representing an entity for the purpose of deceiving others. The person or entity that the imposter claims to be or represents may be genuine, fictitious, or created from a mixture of genuine and/or fictitious information (e.g., pretending to be a member of a family in difficulty and asking relatives for money transfers).

Social engineering

Impersonating someone else to manipulate the target into disclosing information, granting unauthorized access, or performing certain actions that lead to fraud. This type of fraud involves identity theft and deception (a fake Mobile Money agent requesting personal information to update SIM card identification).

Mobile money fraud 1

Infographic: The Main Types of Threats to Mobile Money

Insider fraud

A current or former employee, contractor, or business partner of the Mobile Money service provider implements a fraudulent scheme by taking advantage of their knowledge, skills, experience, or insider access.

SIM swap fraud

A form of identity theft where one person assumes the identity of another by taking over their phone number and/or mobile money account or wallet.

Cyber ​​fraud

Intrusion into the Mobile Money service by hacking the computer system or using a Trojan horse (link sent to a user that introduces malware when clicked)

Fraud and insider threats emerged as a major concern among professionals surveyed by GSMA. Ninety-four percent of them said they were concerned about insider fraud perpetrated by both internal and external parties. Collusion with external fraudsters to commit fraud was identified as the primary insider fraud scheme.

Ali Baba’s Cave

Mobile Money’s growing appeal to fraudsters is explained by the significant volume of financial transactions carried out each year. In 2023, the service already recorded 1.7 billion accounts worldwide, accounting for 85 billion transactions and over $1 trillion in funds transferred. Sub-Saharan Africa alone accounted for 835 million accounts, accounting for 62 billion transactions and $912 billion in funds transferred. This amount of money makes Mobile Money a target for many fraudsters and cybercriminals of all kinds.

Mobile money 2 copy fraudInfographic: The players most impacted by mobile money fraud 

Aware of this illicit interest in Mobile Money, many players operating in the business sector and in the security sector (telecom operators, Fintech, Interpol, etc.) are increasing campaigns and calls to raise awareness among users about good practices to observe. They insist on the need to never share security codes, because even legitimate companies do not ask for them; always check the authenticity of messages and links received and contact the service via its official channels in case of doubt; always use secure applications downloaded only from certified platforms; activate two-factor authentication (2FA) to increase your security margin; regularly monitor your transactions to detect any suspicious activity and report it.

An essential collaboration

Given the dynamic nature of mobile money and the growing threat of fraud in this sector, GSMA recommends that telecom operators invest more in anti-fraud programs, cutting-edge technologies that support security such as artificial intelligence and rigorous monitoring of third parties (agents, technology providers and other third parties). The Association calls on governments to update and improve legal frameworks to address the specific nuances of mobile money fraud, ensuring that laws are robust enough to enable effective prosecution in such cases. Importantly, the collaboration of different stakeholders on various measures, including awareness programs and information sharing, data protection and regular assessment of vulnerabilities that not only jeopardize the mobile money sector, but the entire financial ecosystem.

Source: Extensia

GSMA Confirms End-to-End Encryption for RCS, Enabling Secure Cross-Platform Messaging

GSMA

The GSM Association (GSMA) has formally announced support for end-to-end encryption (E2EE) for securing messages sent via the Rich Communications Services (RCS) protocol, bringing much-needed security protections to cross-platform messages shared between Android and iOS platforms.

To that end, the new GSMA specifications for RCS include E2EE based on the Messaging Layer Security (MLS) protocol via what’s called the RCS Universal Profile 3.0.

“The new specifications define how to apply MLS within the context of RCS,” Tom Van Pelt, technical director of GSMA, said. “These procedures ensure that messages and other content such as files remain confidential and secure as they travel between clients.”

This also means that RCS will be the first “large-scale messaging service” to have support for interoperable E2EE between different client implementations from different providers in the near future.

It’s worth noting that Google’s own implementation of RCS, used in the Messages app for Android, secures conversations using the Signal protocol to address the lack of built-in E2EE protections. That said, the encryption safeguards are currently limited to messages exchanged via the app, and not those exchanged with the iOS Messages users or users of other RCS clients on Android.

The development comes nearly six months after the GSMA said it was working towards implementing end-to-end encryption (E2EE) to secure messages sent between the Android and iOS ecosystems. The move followed Apple’s decision to roll out support for RCS in its own Messages app with iOS 18.

In July 2023, Google revealed that it intends to add support for MLS to its Messages service and open-source implementation of the specification.

“RCS continues to support a range of interoperable messaging functions between iOS and Android users, such as group messaging, the ability to share high-resolution media, and see read receipts and typing indicators,” Van Pelt said.

When reached for comment, Google said, “We’ve always been committed to providing a secure messaging experience, and Google Messages users have had end-to-end encrypted (E2EE) RCS messaging for years. We’re excited to have this updated specification from GSMA and work as quickly as possible with the mobile ecosystem to implement and extend this important user protection to cross-platform RCS messaging.”

Source: The Hacker News

Huawei and GSMA Intelligence Release the Industry Report of how Super Apps are Driving Digital Financial Inclusion

MM-OP-TELECOMS

During MWC25 in Barcelona, Huawei and GSMA Intelligence jointly released the latest research report of Super App, Fintech, mobile money and the rise of super-apps (hereinafter referred to as the research report), aiming to enable financial service providers to quickly unlock a new age of digital life.

According to the research report, the Super App brings essential capabilities such as multi-functionality, a consistent user experience, a strong ecosystem, and digital payment services. Users can utilize a Super App as a gateway to various daily lifestyle services from payment, social networking, shopping, and entertainment and more. For service providers, building a Super App as a super gateway can significantly enhance user engagement and platform value.

The Super App platform should be able to integrate and scale up partnerships quickly. For instance, by integrating mini-programs which can be quickly developed by partners and connected to the super-app, using low/no-code platforms to reduce the development threshold, shorten the time to market, minimize costs and help merchants to quickly launch applications. Additionally, the platform must have robust scalability and security to allow rapid and seamless customer and merchant onboarding while simultaneously not exposing the core platform and its underlying data to breaches.

The rise of Super Apps has had a significant impact on digital financial services, especially in emerging markets. By offering a diverse range of financial services such as digital payments, loans, wealth management, and insurance, Super Apps enhance seamless user experiences and engagement, greatly promoting financial inclusion. In addition, Super Apps also enable personalized service recommendations and digital marketing campaigns, helping platforms and merchants efficiently expand their potential user base and drive business growth. For example, KBZ Bank in Myanmar launched the KBZPay Super App, offering one-stop services to 17.7 million users and 370,000 merchants, while also diversifying its revenue streams.

As a leading global provider of information and communications technology (ICT) infrastructure and smart devices, Huawei is committed to advancing the popularization and innovation of digital financial services. Huawei’s cloud-native, agile, open, and intelligent digital finance solutions have provided inclusive financial services for more than 480 million users worldwide. The cooperation between Huawei and GSMA Intelligence aims to promote the Super App, building a super gateway for financial services, further driving the development of the global digital economy, and enabling inclusiveness of digital finance.

This research report is an important reference for practitioners and decision makers in the fintech and digital payments fields, providing insight into the rise, social value and market opportunities of Super Apps.

Source: www.telecoms.com

Telecom Operators Account for 85 Percent of Mobile Internet Infrastructure Investment: GSMA Report

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Mobile Network Operators (MNOs) account for 85 percent of total global investment in mobile internet infrastructure—approximately USD 109 billion annually—playing a ‘keystone’ role in funding the networks that underpin modern digital economies worldwide, according to a new report released on March 3, 2025, by the GSMA and global management consulting firm Kearney.

MNOs Lead Mobile Infrastructure Investment

“The total investment in mobile internet connectivity infrastructure, averaged over the past 5 years, is USD 244 billion annually, including spend on end-user devices (117 USD billion). Of this, mobile network operators (MNOs) are the largest single group of investors, investing USD 109 billion, which is 85 percent of total investment excluding end-user devices (45 percent of the total when end-user devices are included), followed by consumer spending of USD 95 billion on end-user devices,” the global telecom body stated in its report, Mobile Infrastructure Investment Landscape, published just ahead of MWC 2025 in Barcelona.

Contributions by Other Digital Players

Of the USD 127.3 billion invested in mobile infrastructure excluding end-user devices, major internet service providers (ISPs) contribute just 7 percent, followed by tower companies (4 percent), large cloud application providers (CAPs), content delivery networks (CDNs), and cloud infrastructure providers (3 percent), and satellite providers (1 percent), according to GSMA.

The recipients of this USD 127.3 billion investment primarily include end-user device manufacturers (USD 112 billion), various equipment suppliers for transport, IP switching, mobile core and radio networks, installation service companies, and governments that provide licensed spectrum, the GSMA report said.

The Mobile Industry body noted, “Mobile operators make these investments despite deriving less economic benefit than other ‘digital ecosystem players’ from this critical infrastructure.” The report cited an example, stating that the amount contributed by MNOs far exceeds the connectivity investments made by other groups of investors, such as cloud service providers and content and application providers (CAPs).

“Mobile network operators are the keystone of the internet economy, funding the vast majority of the infrastructure that enables modern digital life. Whilst others invest in select parts of the world’s connectivity infrastructure, their contributions are a fraction of what MNOs spend to build and maintain the networks that power everything from online banking to remote work and digital entertainment,” said John Giusti, Chief Regulatory Officer of the GSMA.

“This study demonstrates clearly that if governments wish to unlock the full potential of their digital economies, they must prioritise policies that create a positive investment environment for MNOs,” Giusti added.

Investment by Cloud Providers

“Although MNOs are the largest group of investors in mobile internet connectivity infrastructure, large CAPs and cloud infrastructure providers have been increasing their direct investments into the backbone infrastructure to directly interconnect their data centres and build CDN infrastructure to deliver traffic directly to MNO core networks. However, this is only a fraction of what MNOs invest,” the GSMA report said.

Investments by MNOs

The report highlights that despite limited investment by other players in the connectivity ecosystem—such as cloud and content providers—in backbone and content delivery networks (CDNs), these investments do not replace the need for substantial mobile infrastructure investment by mobile network operators. The core and access networks, which are fully funded by MNOs, remain fundamental to a functioning, capable internet which serves the needs of consumers and businesses worldwide, fuelling growth across the broader digital ecosystem.

Role of Governments

The report further emphasised that “governments should prioritise pro-investment policies to accelerate network expansion and strengthen digital economies.” To support continued network expansion and innovation, the GSMA urges governments to adopt forward-looking regulatory frameworks that encourage investment in mobile infrastructure, streamline spectrum policies, and create a fair and sustainable financial environment for operators, it said.

Source: www.telecomtalk.info

Reported By

Srikapardhi (Telecom Analyst)

Airtel chair pushes for tie-ups with sat players

Airtel

Bharti Airtel chair Sunil Mittal (pictured) called on governments and regulators to allow consolidation to give mobile players the incentive to invest heavily in new infrastructure and partner with satellite operators.

Mittal insisted it’s not the time to fight with each other but to work together. “We have a mission to finish the job of covering the last 400 million people,” highlighting satellite service is the solution to filling coverage gaps.

Regarding consolidation, he insisted it is time to embrace each other, share and compete in the marketplace. “Compete on the strength of your brands, your services, but don’t try to compete by building solo capital infrastructure.”

He asked: “How many fibre highways are enough? How many duplicate towers are enough?”

India had 12 operators at its peak. Spectrum was fragmented, small networks were being built, he said. “Everybody was chasing urban, lucrative areas at the cost of rural,” which disparately required coverage.

The country is now down to three, giving operators the necessary scale. “We have 4G and 5G coverage in every corner of the country.”

Mittal also urged authorities to lower taxes and allocate sufficient spectrum at affordable costs.

While average industry revenue growth is around just 2 per cent, he stated year after year operators face demands to buy expensive spectrum, putting $200 billion into capex annually.

The chair said he hopes this message will resonate with industry stakeholders, and “we will start to reset our industry”.

“This is one industry that is bearing the burden of building out the digital infrastructure across the globe. How much is this industry taking the load itself? The return on capital is just an average of 4 per cent.”

Source: Mobile World Live

GSMA forecasts 5G and mobile tech to fuel $11 trillion in GDP by 2030, transforming industries like manufacturing, finance, and automotive.

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Ahead of MWC25 Barcelona, GSMA Intelligence has launched research highlighting a dramatic shift in the global economy, with advanced connectivity and mobile technologies to contribute $11 trillion to global GDP by 2030 – which represents 8.4% of the total. This surge represents a significant increase from the contribution of $6.5 trillion (5.8% of overall GDP) in 2024, emphasising the growing role and exciting potential of digital technologies and enterprise transformation in reshaping industries.

GSMA Intelligence’s Economic Growth and the Digital Transformation of Enterprises 2025 report highlights manufacturing, financial services, automotive and aviation as pivotal sectors, contributing nearly 34% of the projected $11 trillion impact by 2030. Advanced connectivity will continue to transform these industries, driving significant cost efficiencies and revenue growth globally.

Advanced connectivity such as 5G is unlocking new opportunities for innovation and growth. However, to realise its full potential, more collaboration is needed between policymakers, network operators and enterprises to overcome barriers to enterprise adoption such as high implementation costs and lack of technical expertise. Only through deep cooperation can we fully harness the benefits of this digital revolution.

– Pau Castells, Head of Economic Analysis, GSMA Intelligence

Manufacturing

  • Manufacturing currently accounts for 23% of global GDP, facing significant challenges including supply chain disruptions and the need to adjust to climate targets. Promisingly, the adoption of technologies such as IoT, robotics and big data analytics is projected to boost the sector’s GDP by $2.1 trillion by 2030.
  • By integrating advanced connectivity solutions, including 5G, the report predicts manufacturers could achieve over $400 billion in annual cost savings by 2030.

Financial services

  • The financial services sector currently contributes 7% to global GDP, experiencing rapid transformation through widespread adoption of technologies including cloud computing, AI, and blockchain. According to our research, this transformation will boost the sector’s GDP by nearly $900 billion by 2030.
  • Next-gen connectivity plays a central role in enabling new channels to real-time data analysis, integration of artificial intelligence for improved task efficiency and faster time to market for new products. By 2030, this could uplift sector’s revenue by nearly $140 billion in indirect benefits.

Automotive

  • The automotive sector contributes approximately 3% to global GDP, and it is undergoing a profound transformation driven by the adoption of connected, electric and autonomous mobility solutions. By 2030, digital technologies are expected to increase the industry’s GDP by almost $600 billion.
  • 5G will play a critical role in enabling smart automotive factories and autonomous vehicle operations, saving the sector a projected $45 billion annually by 2030.

Aviation

  • Contributing 1% to global GDP, the aviation sector uses digital technologies to enhance operational efficiency and passenger experiences. Digital transformation is expected to boost the sector’s GDP by $200 billion by 2030.
  • 5G-enabled smart airport solutions, including IoT sensors and AI-powered systems, will enhance infrastructure monitoring, asset tracking and security systems, potentially saving airports $10 billion annually by 2030.

Redefining connectivity with 5G

As industries worldwide undergo rapid digital transformation, 5G stands out as a key component of economic growth, with nearly 85% of enterprises rating 5G as critical to their digital transformation strategies. With ultra-fast data transmission, low latency and massive device connectivity, 5G is enabling use cases previously constrained by legacy technologies. The report highlights that industries adopting 5G technologies are experiencing accelerated progress in automation, AI integration and IoT-based solutions.

Supporting Digital Transformation with GSMA Connected Industries at MWC

GSMA Connected Industries returns to MWC25 Barcelona this year to showcase the transformative potential of advanced mobile technologies and diverse solutions across Manufacturing and ProductionFintech and Mobile CommerceSmart Mobility and Sports and Entertainment. Bringing together a wide range of businesses and industry leaders, Connected Industries is an exclusive showcase of how 5G, IoT and other digital solutions are powering smarter and greener operations, unlocking new possibilities in advanced connectivity and accelerating the next wave of industry 4.0.

Connected Industries at MWC offers a unique opportunity for businesses and technology leaders to hear first-hand from our GSMA members and partners on how emerging mobile technologies and 5G applications are shaping industries and enabling new use cases like enhanced factory floor automation, improved fraud prevention, smart airports and connected and autonomous vehicles. Mobile is certainly at the heart of digital transformation and our summits at MWC will showcase these innovations throughout the week.

– Richard Cockle, Connected Industries lead and Head, GSMA Foundry

The GSMA also supports Connected Communities, an initiative to bring mobile network operators and industry together to innovate. Members can get involved in the communities to collaborate on technical projects, participate in thought-leadership, share knowledge and insights, network with the broader ecosystem and help to drive digital change. The GSMA’s Connected Communities span Connected Manufacturing and Production, Connected Fintech and Mobile Commerce, Aviation, 5G IoT, 5G Futures, Identity and Data, the Tower & Fibre Forum, Non-Terrestrial Networks (NTN) and Satellite and the 5G Innovation and Investment Group Forum.

Source: www.techafricanews.com

Best in the world: Ghana claims top spot in new GSMA mobile money regulatory ranking

Ghana

Ghana has emerged as the leading country in the world when it comes to countries with regulatory frameworks that enable widespread mobile money adoption.

This was contained in the 2024 Mobile Money Regulatory Index (MMRI) by the GSMA, which is a global organisation unifying the mobile ecosystem. Ghana beat 89 other countries including the likes of Brazil, Mexico, Rwanda, and Qatar to claim the top spot with a leading Index Score of “95.06” points. The other countries that rounded up the top were Rwanda (95 points), Qatar (94.21 points), Malawi (93.88 points)and El Salvador (93.75 points).

(The top 10 countries. Source: GSMA)

The breakdown

The Mobile Money Regulatory Index (MMRI) which has 6 broad dimensions, is further broken down into 40 indicators which are scored according to relevant criteria assessment. While Ghana scored a perfect 100 points in 3 of the 6 dimensions, including “Transparency and Disclosure Requirements”, “Authorisation” and “Consumer Protection”, it recorded a low figure of 83.75 points under the “Policy Enablement” dimension due to its poor performance under the “Taxation (0 points)indicator.

(Source: GSMA)

Impact of the E-Levy

A further interrogation of the data showed that the presence of discriminatory taxation (mobile-specific taxes) imposed on mobile money services in Ghana impacted the score recorded under the “Taxation (0 points)” indicator. The absence of the E-Levy and any other discriminatory taxes on mobile money would have led to Ghana being awarded 100 points which would have seen the country’s world-leading score of 95.06 points rise further.

The Index

According to the GSMA, the Mobile Money Regulatory Index was first developed in 2018 to provide a non-binary and objective assessment of the extent to which regulatory frameworks enable mobile money services to thrive. Until 2021, the index was comprised of 28 indicators clustered in six dimensions, with each indicator scored based on both qualitative and quantitative scoring metrics.