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GCA Endorses the Global Public-Private Partnership Framework against Fraud

The Global Fraud Summit 2026, jointly organized by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) and the International Criminal Police Organization (INTERPOL), was held in Vienna on 16-17 March 2026. The Summit aimed to turn commitments into actions against fraud, and to shape public-private cooperation. Law enforcement, policymakers, industry leaders, and civil society organizations came together to confront a rapidly evolving threat: fraud at a global, digital scale. While the agenda covered everything from law enforcement challenges to the need for international cooperation, three key takeaways stood out. GenAI-Driven Fraud Is a Global and Urgent Threat From more convincing phishing attacks to scalable, automated scams, emerging technologies like generative AI are lowering the barrier for criminals while increasing the sophistication of attacks. The “industrialization” of fraud by transnational organized crime groups makes this especially concerning and is driving the breathtaking speed at which it is being adopted. This is not a future risk. It is already happening, and it is an accelerating and urgent threat. No Single Actor Can Solve This Alone Summit discussions also made clear that fraud cannot be tackled by any one country, sector, or institution independently. The cross-border nature of the Internet itself, in addition to the international scope of digital fraud and fragmented legal and enforcement systems creates gaps that criminal networks exploit effectively. Speakers repeatedly emphasized the need for international coordination, public-private partnerships, and real-time information sharing. Without collective and coordinated action, responses will remain incomplete. Action Must Follow Dialogue We’re also seeing a shift in tone from awareness to implementation. Discussions are not enough; the real challenge lies in translating dialogue into concrete policies, operational collaboration, and scalable solutions. This urgency is driven by the real-world impact of fraud. AI is amplifying the scale and sophistication of scams, which lead to significant financial losses and emotional distress while eroding trust in everyday digital interactions and therefore trust in the foundations of global commerce and communications. To address this, the Summit put forward two instruments: - The Call to Action on Combating Fraud – open to UN member states and intergovernmental organizations, and - The Global Public-Private Partnership Framework against Fraud – open to member states, intergovernmental organizations, private sector entities, and civil society organizations. In keeping with our continued work to combat fraud and scams, GCA is proud to have endorsed the Global Public-Private Partnership Framework against Fraud. The Framework underscores the critical importance of public-private partnerships, based on respect for the principle of sovereignty, as the foundation for an effective, coordinated response. Built on shared responsibility, the Framework confirms our collective commitment to taking action to prevent and disrupt fraud, on the basis of the following principles: - Shared responsibility - Proactive and coordinated prevention - Information-sharing as a basis for cooperation - Victim support - Education for the public and businesses - Innovation and adaptability Final Thought The Global Fraud Summit reinforced that the fight against fraud is entering a new phase defined by technological disruption, global scale, and the need for coordinated action. What happens next will depend on whether stakeholders can move quickly enough from alignment to execution.

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