MTN Ghana Head of Mobile Money, Eli Hini has cautioned customers against giving out their Mobile Money PIN to people who call them on phone and claim to be staff of MTN.
He was speaking to Adom News at a media workshop organized by MTN and E-Crime Bureau to sensitize news editors on ways fraudsters manage to steal money from people’s mobile wallets.
It is very common for MTN customers to get calls from people claiming to be staff of MTN and demanding some payment via mobile money as a way of claiming some supposed award won in a promo.
Many such unsuspecting customers have been so defrauded in recent times.
Eli Hini said MTN, in collaboration with the police, have recently arrested a number of such fraudsters who are being prepared for prosecution soon.
He however cautioned that it is never a practice at MTN to call customers and ask them to mention or dial their Mobile Money PIN so “if anyone ever calls you and says you have won a promo so dial you PIN or pay money that person is a fraudster.”
“Often when a customer wins in a promo we will only call you with our 0244300000 number and show you how to get your prize. We will never ask for your PIN or for you to pay money,” he said.
Hini is confident that if customers got this understanding, 90 per cent of the mobile money fraud problem would have been solved.
Touching on the MTN Mobile Money service itself, Eli Hini said currently it has nine million active customers out of which some six million are billed to receive their 2017 first quarter interests this month.
He said beyond the interest on the balance in mobile wallets, MTN Mobile Money also runs a Yellow Save product with Fidelity Bank, which offers customers up to 12 per cent interest on their balance.
“Customers can also buy government treasury bills with the TBills4U product on MTN Mobile Money through Ecobank,” he said.
Hini said all the services on the platform, including remittance, payments, airtime top up and others are growing exponentially, particularly after the ISO certification which assure users of safety.
Principal Consultant at E-Crime Bureau, Albert Antwi-Boasiako said phone users also need to be cautions of which sites they visit on their phones because some sites have viruses and Trojans that are able to extract vital information such as PIN numbers, passwords and others.
He said pornography sites in particular pose the threat of Trojans that cyber fraudsters use to extract such information to steal from customers.
Albert Antwi-Boasiako also urged phone users to install reliable anti viruses on their phones to protect their vital information.
He also touched on the recent attack on some media house websites saying that he suspect the galamsey operators were behind those attacks because of the huge anti-galamsey campaign by the media.
He noted that the timing of the attacks raise the suspicion, adding that the attackers succeeded because the targeted websites were hosted on servers that also hosts several other websites, and that exposed them to risks.