Artificial intelligence is making fraud increasingly sophisticated, making the credibility and integrity of underlying data a critical factor in effective fraud prevention. According to Samenthrie Govender, organisations must combine trusted data sources, robust governance, human oversight and intelligent technology to strengthen verification and reduce fraud risk.
Artificial intelligence is not just changing how fraud is committed, it is changing how trust is established.
Today, fraudsters can use AI to generate convincing documents, create synthetic identities, manipulate images, and even build entire digital footprints that appear legitimate at first glance. As these technologies become more sophisticated and accessible, organisations face a growing challenge: how do you verify information when almost anything can be fabricated?
For years, fraud prevention has focused on verifying identities, credentials and transactions. Those checks remain essential, but in the AI era, there is an even more fundamental question that businesses need to ask: How trustworthy is the data behind the decision?
The reality is that verification is only as reliable as the sources from which information is obtained. If the underlying data is inaccurate, outdated, manipulated or unverified, even the most advanced technology will struggle to deliver meaningful results.
This is where the conversation around fraud prevention needs to evolve.
Recent discussions across South Africa’s insurance and financial services sectors have reinforced that fraud is becoming increasingly organised, digital and technology-driven. While much of the focus has understandably been on AI’s role in enabling fraud, less attention has been paid to an equally important issue: the integrity of the information organisations rely on to verify identities, assess risk and make critical decisions.
Too often, organisations focus on detecting fraudulent activity after it has entered their systems. Increasingly, however, the real differentiator is the quality and credibility of the information used to assess risk in the first place. The ability to trace data back to trusted, accountable sources is becoming just as important as the technology used to analyse it.
At SW360, we believe the future of fraud prevention lies in strengthening the integrity of the verification process itself. While technology continues to evolve, organisations must be equally focused on where their information comes from and whether those sources are reliable, accountable and independently verifiable.
This means moving beyond simply validating an identity or a document. It requires confidence that the data informing onboarding decisions, compliance checks, due diligence investigations and fraud assessments has been sourced responsibly and can withstand scrutiny. In an environment where digital information can be manipulated with increasing ease, trusted data attribution is becoming a critical component of effective risk management.
This is particularly important in highly regulated sectors such as insurance, financial services and lending, where a single fraudulent transaction can result in significant financial and reputational damage. In these environments, trusted data is not simply a compliance requirement; it is the foundation on which sound decisions are made.
The rise of AI has also highlighted an important truth: technology alone will not solve the fraud challenge. Organisations need a combination of intelligent tools, robust governance, human oversight and, perhaps most importantly, credible data sources. The strongest fraud prevention strategies will be built on all four pillars.
In many ways, we are entering a new era of digital trust. Businesses are no longer asking whether they have enough data or fast enough algorithms. They are asking whether they can trust the data they have and where it came from.
In the age of AI, that question may well become the most important one any organisation asks before making a decision.
By Samenthrie Govender, Regional Manager: Gauteng, SW360
About SW360
SW360 is South Africa’s leading data intelligence platform, empowering businesses to verify, assess, and manage risk confidence. At the core of its offering are two powerful products – Searchworks and VOCA, each playing a key role in delivering real-time, verified data across industries. Find out more at www.sw360.co.za.
For further information:
Monica van der Spuy | GinjaNinja | M: +27 71 685 6476 | E: [email protected]


