TELL VENMO: PROTECT OUR PRIVACY
Consumers are increasingly reliant on payment apps like Venmo for living our financial lives, and we deserve apps that are safe and trustworthy.
A report examining complaints to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau on digital payment apps, since the CFPB began collecting them in this category three years ago. The key takeaway: Consumers don’t realize these online transfer payments are instantaneous and treated like cash, so when fraud strikes, you’re likely to be left without recourse.
A report by U.S. PIRG Education Fund
By Ed Mierzwinski, U.S. PIRG Education Fund
VIEW THE FULL REPORT
Consumers are increasingly using digital payment apps for convenience. The peer-to-peer (P2P) apps were originally marketed as a way for friends to split expenses. But, perhaps due to a concern for contactless payments during a pandemic, consumers are using them for more and more transactions, opening their bank accounts to scammers.
Consumers don’t realize that the instantaneous transactions are not reversible, nor that they have fewer consumer protections when they use a payment app or service. So, complaints are way up. The three most commonly complained-about issues involving digital wallets are problems managing, opening or closing accounts; problems with fraud or scams; and problems with transactions (including unauthorized transactions).
Digital wallet complaints have increased sharply in 2021. In April 2021, complaints nearly doubled from the previous record month, July 2020.
Paypal (which also owns Venmo), Square (which owns Cash App) and Coinbase — accounted for more than two-thirds of all digital wallet complaints through April 2021.
Ninety percent of all complaints in the report were against the ten most complained-about companies.
App websites have pages of warnings to watch out for fraud, yet some encourage more use of the apps through sweepstakes and other gimmicks, which opens a door to scammers.
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Tips for consumers
When you use a peer-to-peer (P2P) payment app, you have fewer rights by law and are vulnerable to more threats from scammers.
Bottom line for consumers: Don’t use P2P with strangers, beware of phishing or unexpected requests, and double check usernames.
Recommendations
Policymakers should strengthen consumer protections on payment apps to:
Consumers are increasingly reliant on payment apps like Venmo for living our financial lives, and we deserve apps that are safe and trustworthy.
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