At the Global Fraud Summit in Vienna, Fraud Minister Lord Hanson’s keynote speech set out the UK’s vision of fraud as “one of the defining security issues of our age” and urged governments, law enforcement, platforms and industry to move from “slow‑motion co‑operation” to real‑time information sharing and disruption. He highlighted that fraud now represents around 44% of all crime in the UK, with proceeds often recycled into drugs, people trafficking and wider organised crime, and argued that no country can tackle the threat alone given its deeply transnational and digitally enabled nature.
Hanson used the speech to promote the new global public‑private partnership on fraud, developed by the UK to operationalise the UN framework. The model aims to hard‑wire shared working between governments, telecoms, banks and major tech platforms so prevention and disruption are “faster, more consistent and more effective”, with stronger safeguards to stop scams at source and much quicker identification of emerging patterns and repeat offenders. He also announced UK backing for an Interpol‑led Global Task Force on scam centres, explicitly signalling a willingness to “take the fight” to large‑scale overseas fraud hubs.
The keynote underlines several themes that run through the Fraud Strategy 2026 to 2029: pressure to strip away legal and practical barriers to lawful data sharing, expectations that platforms and communications providers play a full part in traceback and blocking, and a strong political focus on visible, operational outcomes rather than high‑level commitments. As these international initiatives bed in, members engaged in international routing or with significant exposure to cross‑border traffic should expect closer scrutiny of high‑risk routes, more joint activity with law enforcement and platforms, and growing emphasis on near real‑time collaboration on fraud indicators and scam campaigns.