Google says it has joined a new international industry accord aimed at strengthening the fight against online scams and fraud. The announcement was made at the UN Global Fraud Summit in Vienna, where a group of major companies said they would work together on threat intelligence sharing, scam detection and cross-border enforcement support.
Google has announced that it is joining a new industry agreement focused on combating online scams and fraud, as governments and private-sector organizations face mounting pressure to respond to increasingly sophisticated scam activity.
The company said the agreement, called the Industry Accord Against Online Scams and Fraud, was signed at the UN Global Fraud Summit in Vienna. Other participating companies include Adobe, Amazon, LinkedIn, Meta, Microsoft, OpenAI, Pinterest and Target, among others.
According to Google, the accord is intended to improve cooperation between major online platforms and consumer-facing businesses by encouraging intelligence sharing, coordinated defenses and broader collaboration against fraud threats that often cross borders.
The announcement reflects growing concern over the scale of modern online fraud. Many scams now involve organized criminal networks operating across jurisdictions, using digital tools and evolving tactics to target individuals and businesses. Victims can face not only financial losses, but also significant emotional stress and disruption.
Google also said it plans to expand its anti-fraud efforts beyond the accord itself. The company pointed to prior funding through Google.org and said it intends to make greater use of technical expertise and AI-based tools to help identify and disrupt scams.
Further measures are expected in 2026, including expanded information-sharing through the Global Signal Exchange, closer collaboration with law enforcement, and additional work with international partners on cross-border anti-fraud responses. Google also said industry participants plan to release guidance on issues such as data sharing, referrals to law enforcement and policy frameworks.
The move signals a broader push toward collective action against online fraud, as companies and public agencies alike confront scams that are becoming more organized, more international and harder to detect.
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Originally published on Canadian Fraud News.
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