Technological Promises, Criminal Realities. A conversation between Julian Dixon and Oliver Bullough

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In the past decade, the ‘Regulatory Technology’ sector, or ‘RegTech’, has developed quickly in response to the need to manage existing financial crime risks better, enabled by the growing capacity and capability of evolving technologies themselves.

FinCrime World Forum 2021: On-Demand Session

technological-promises-criminal-realities

In the past decade, the ‘Regulatory Technology’ sector, or ‘RegTech’, has developed quickly in response to the need to manage existing financial crime risks better, enabled by the growing capacity and capability of evolving technologies themselves. Many entrepreneurs have emerged from the technological and financial services sectors, looking for distinct ways in which to apply data analytic techniques, ‘AI’ and other advances to the classic issues of criminal detection and disruption.

At the same time, we have also witnessed a expansion in public awareness of the realities and consequences of financial crime. Driven by a new generation of investigative journalists in both in the developed and developing world, the public is increasingly aware that, after thirty years of an avowed international mission to fight financial crime, things appear now to be as bad as they have ever.