Fraud prevention has long been centered around the payment itself : detecting suspicious transactions, applying scoring engines, triggering step-up authentication, or blocking transfers at the final moment. But scams increasingly prove that this approach alone is no longer sufficient. By the time a payment instruction reaches a bank, the manipulation has often already happened: the victim has been convinced, pressured, coached, or emotionally pushed into authorizing the transaction themselves. In an era of instant and irrevocable payments, the time window for intervention at payment initiation is shrinking dramatically . That means scam prevention must move further upstream, towards the earlier moments where deception begins. This is precisely the evolution I already described in my previous blogs " The First Line of Defense: Tackling Scams Before Transactions " ( https://bankloch.blogspot.com/2025/09/the-first-line-of-defense-tackling.html" ) and " The Missing L...
Financial institutions invest heavily in monitoring. Infrastructure teams track server availability, applications are supervised through technical alerts, and operations teams receive notifications when queues build up or interfaces slow down. Yet despite this extensive monitoring landscape, many organizations still struggle to answer a simple but critical question when an issue arises: which business transactions are actually impacted? The reason is that traditional monitoring mainly focuses on technical health rather than business execution. A server may be fully operational, an application may show no visible error, and a process may appear to complete successfully, while in reality a critical transaction is delayed, incomplete, duplicated, or blocked somewhere across a chain of interconnected systems. In many cases, these issues only become visible once customers start asking questions, deadlines are missed, or financial exposure begins to grow. This is precisely where Bu...