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Really Get To Know Your Business Partners With a New Solution From Lithuania’s iDenfy

A new automated know your business (KYB) platform has been brought to the market by iDenfy. The business verification services of the Lithuanian identity verification and fraud prevention startup will offer custom automatisation in one API, allowing businesses to screen other companies and detect criminal activity more efficiently.

iDenfy claims to have created the world’s most efficient fraud prevention solution to detect bogus companies.

CEO, Domantas Ciulde iDenfy
Domantas Ciulde

According to the startup’s CEO, Domantas Ciulde, the new KYB platform ensures compliance, detects fraud in real-time, and helps decrease drop-off rates. iDenfy reportedly spent months developing unique algorithms that scan information from business registries and major credit bureaus, which generate over 540 million company records in total.

Typically, KYB is an extension of know your customer (KYC). It’s a process where companies identify their customers by verifying their identities. The procedure fights money laundering, terrorist financing and tax crimes. KYB shares the same features as KYC, but it is used for business verification.

According to Ciulde, iDenfy’s service is designed to detect illegitimate companies and avoid damage. As the company’s CEO states, even though there are similar tools available on the market, the unique selling point of iDenfy’s business verification services is its reliability, rate of effectiveness and compatibility.

The automated software is capable of recognising illicit companies and allows simpler customer onboarding with minimal effort. “The goal was to turn the complex business onboarding process to a user-friendly platform, similar to our first-ever product four-step person onboarding solution,” adds Ciulde.

iDenfy’s team also conducted internal research to understand the market better and adjust its business verification platform to the customers’ needs. By analysing different companies, iDenfy noticed that the number of fraudulent businesses is rising.

“There were multiple cases of fake, ‘virtual’ registrations and activity addresses. One virtual office company in England alone had registered almost 70,000 companies allegedly operating in the same office with various fictitious companies,” continues Ciulde.

iDenfy’s KYB solution detects the company’s address and shows office interior and exterior images from street view, the internet, satellite, and other sources to identify and evaluate the potential risks behind the company that’s being screened.

Cybersecurity

According to the images, iDenfy distinguishes whether it is a dormitory, a residential house, a commercial premise, or a luxury office. The services are reportedly even capable of determining the company’s office rental price.

If the company’s indicated monthly expenses are worth hundreds of thousands, but the monthly rent for the office is a few hundred dollars, that is immediately suspicious.” – tells the CEO, describing that this feature is vital to evaluate the validity of the business address.

Many industries, especially the financial sector, must conduct business verifications as a mandatory requirement. For example, companies that are regulated in the business-to-business (B2B) sector must carry out due diligence to scan their partners.

This way, businesses ensure security guarantees; otherwise, breaches of financial sanctions and regulations result in damaged reputations or criminal proceedings.

One of the biggest challenges for running a business remains regulatory burdens. While some argue that compliance services are costly, the responsibility to comply with legal and regulatory requirements affects every company from small businesses to large-scale organisations.

Despite that, covering fines for the lack of KYC or KYB compliance is more damaging. A memorable illustration of this scenario is the Western Union case where, according to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), the business ignored fraudulent payments that were made through its transfer system, harming millions of account holders. The fraud schemes resulted in refunds worth $153million.

iDenfy’s chief business development officer, Darius Sulte describes the platform’s biggest benefit, being that it’s not a ‘one-time’ risk assessment that happens only during customer onboarding. Collecting and monitoring the company’s data in real-time helps identify the risks of money laundering from the business’ relationship from start to finish.

“Our mission was to build a platform that would change the old, expensive business verification methods in the market. Improving operational efficiency while achieving anti-money laundering compliance is a priority for every regulated company,” concludes Ciulde.

“All this now can be achieved by avoiding illicit companies in the fastest and most inexpensive way. We believe that our new automated platform revolutionises the business verification landscape.”

Author

  • Tyler is a fintech journalist with specific interests in online banking and emerging AI technologies. He began his career writing with a plethora of national and international publications.

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