Amid rising fraud levels, the voluntary deal pledges international intelligence-sharing, faster takedowns, advertiser verification, plus law enforcement cooperation.
Major tech platforms, telecom operators and banks have signed a new cross-border pact this week to share data and coordinate action against online scams, intensifying pressure on digital platforms to stem fraud that increasingly exploits their services.
The voluntary agreement aims to close long‑criticized gaps between social media, messaging apps, payment providers and telcos that scammers use to move quickly between channels and jurisdictions.
Under the pact, leading technology, banking and telecommunications firms have pledged:
- to step up intelligence‑sharing on suspected fraud
- to work together on faster takedowns of malicious content and accounts
- to strengthen verification of advertisers and business customers using their platforms
Participating firms have also committed to cooperate more closely with law enforcement and regulators, reflecting a shift from voluntary, siloed initiatives to more formalized arrangements that span multiple industries.
Rising scam rates drive cooperation
The pact builds on earlier national and sector‑specific efforts, such as Hong Kong’s successive Anti‑Scam Charters, which has progressively brought banks, mobile operators and now major technology platforms into a coordinated framework to disrupt phishing and investment scams at source.
In the United Kingdom, a separate telecommunications charter has already committed mobile networks and the government to target caller ID spoofing, a common technique in phone‑based fraud.
Authorities and industry bodies argue that these initiatives demonstrate the value of cross‑sector controls, from blocking fraudulent calls and messages to tightening rules on links and ads used to harvest personal and financial data.
Regulators and anti‑fraud groups say global coordination is increasingly urgent as scam operations industrialize and shift rapidly between countries and platforms.
Research from the Global Anti‑Scam Alliance and other advocacy groups has highlighted the Asia Pacific region as both a major victim region and a base for sophisticated scam syndicates, prompting governments in markets such as Singapore, Hong Kong and Thailand to set up national anti‑scam centers and explore shared‑liability frameworks for banks and telcos.
These measures often rely on near‑real‑time data sharing between police and financial institutions to identify likely victims and freeze transfers before funds leave the system.
Despite the new pact, campaigners warn that voluntary commitments alone may not be enough to curb losses without hard regulatory backstops. Consumer advocates are pushing for clearer legal duties on platforms that profit from online advertising and payments, including obligations to vet advertisers, compensate victims where platforms fail to act, and publish transparent metrics on scam reports and takedown performance.
The anti‑scam agreement’s signatories have framed the initiative as a step towards a more integrated global response, but acknowledge that scammers are likely to adapt quickly to any new controls.


