惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

K
Kaspersky official blog
罗磊的独立博客
F
Fortinet All Blogs
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
量子位
V
Visual Studio Blog
Blog — PlanetScale
Blog — PlanetScale
M
MIT News - Artificial intelligence
B
Blog RSS Feed
腾讯CDC
博客园_首页
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
博客园 - Franky
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
N
Netflix TechBlog - Medium
小众软件
小众软件
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
K
KPMG report finds enterprise disconnect between AI and its ROI | CIO
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
L
LINUX DO - 热门话题
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
Martin Fowler
Martin Fowler
D
Docker
P
Privacy & Cybersecurity Law Blog
S
Securelist
V
V2EX
Jina AI
Jina AI
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
T
Tor Project blog
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
Microsoft Azure Blog
Microsoft Azure Blog
AWS News Blog
AWS News Blog
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
Help Net Security
Help Net Security
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
博客园 - 叶小钗
Recent Announcements
Recent Announcements
Cloudbric
Cloudbric
Y
Y Combinator Blog
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
Latest news
Latest news
MongoDB | Blog
MongoDB | Blog
H
Hackread – Cybersecurity News, Data Breaches, AI and More
Recorded Future
Recorded Future
V2EX - 技术
V2EX - 技术

PYMNTS.com

Crypto Payments Are Back. Will Merchants Actually Care This Time? B2B’s New Battlefield Is Everything Before the Button Amazon Targets the GLP-1 Gap Big Pharma Left Open LendingClub Signals Expanded Capabilities With Happen Bank Rebrand Congress Moves to Give FinTechs Direct Fed Payment Access Microsoft Tests Mythos to Identify and Mitigate Vulnerabilities United Airlines Hikes Fares as Fuel Costs Surge OpenAI Images 2.0 Is a Real Leap With a Real Price Tag Morgan Stanley Says Gaming Could Score $22 Billion With AI FTC Shuts Down Alleged Healthcare Fraud Scheme Sam’s Club Offers eCommerce Shoppers Hour-or-Less Deliveries FinTechs Cut Staff as AI and Margins Redefine Growth JPMorganChase Extends Critical Industries Investment Program to Continental Europe OpenAI Lands $75 Million Investment From Robinhood Ventures House Bill Would Reduce Small Lenders’ Reporting Requirements Coinbase Lists tGBP to Expand Locally-Denominated Stablecoin Access BNY Names New Head for Payments/Trade Client Platform KnowBe4 Automates Global Cash Flow Via Flywire Partnership Treasury Calls for Programmable Financial Enforcement Across Crypto DeepSeek Seeks $20 Billion Valuation as Tech Giants Weigh Investment Google Accelerates Agentic AI Shift With New Enterprise Platform OpenAI Begins Briefing Governments on Cybersecurity Capabilities DeFi Security Suffers New Blow With $3 Million Volo Exploit Uninvited Users Access Anthropic’s Mythos AI Model Block and Uber Expand Partnership Across Several Global Markets OpenAI Pledges $1.5 Billion to PE Enterprise AI Project Podcast: Inside the $9 Billion DeFi Hack That’s Shaking Crypto’s Foundations Synchrony CFO Flags Momentum in Spending and Credit Banks Risk Slowing the Emerging Middle Market Firms Driving Growth Paysafe Expands Digital Wallet Availability Across 18 European Markets Bad Data Can Break Good AI in Payments 50% More Digital Shopping Days Put Parents at the Center of Retail’s Shift 65% Call Insurance Essential. Why Most Spending Isn’t So Clear-Cut Amazon Recasts Marketplace Fraud as a Broader Trust Problem Capital One’s Q1 Shifts Attention From Spending to Strategy Lawmakers Question JetBlue About Surveillance Pricing Allegations Payments Modernization Is Insurance’s Next Big Margin Engine How Visa Is Rewiring Bank Infrastructure for the AI Era Instant Payments Grow but the Real Barrier Is Human The Old-School Card Product Banks May Need Most 43% of SMBs Would Pay to Make Purchases in Installments The Real AI Edge in Payments Comes From Better Judgment In the Age of Agentic AI, Data Control Is Power Verizon’s Dan Schulman Tells CEOs to Be Open About AI Job Cuts Walmart Eyes Stores as Warehouse Space for Same-Day Delivery France’s CB Payments Network Aims to Take on Visa/Mastercard in EU QVC Was TikTok Shop Before TikTok Shop Loop Raises $95 Million to Bridge Supply Chain Data Gap Cursor Eyes $50 Billion Valuation as AI Coding Demand Surges Commercial Lending Rescues Regional Banks From Consumer Slowdown Anthropic and White House Aim to Make Peace in Friday Meeting Home Depot Buys SIMPL Automation to Support Same-Day Delivery The Riskiest Words in B2B: This Is How We’ve Always Done It France Urges Euro Stablecoins to Break Dollar Dependency Importers Prep for Monday Opening of Tariff Refund Portal Permitting Hurdles and Labor Shortages Threaten AI Data Center Timelines Token Freezes Force CFOs to Rethink Stablecoin Risk X Money Tests Whether Social Commerce Can Hold Consumer Deposits Anthropic Briefs EU Regulators on Mythos Cybersecurity Concerns Welcome to Vibe Ordering, ChatGPT Is Taking Your Order Now Nvidia Says AI Can Finally Make Quantum Computing Work QVC Files Chapter 11 to Slash Debt and Pursue Growth Uber Eats Lets Customers Return Their Retail Purchases Financial Officials Sound Alarm About Anthropic’s Banking Risk 71% of Billion-Dollar Firms Face Agent Identity Threats What If Clearing Had Its Stripe Moment? OpenAI Targets Pharma Giants With Purpose-Built AI Model California Claims Amazon Punishes Sellers for Lower Prices on Other Sites CFTC Chairman Says AI Helps Agency Run More Like a Business Global Finance Chiefs Call for Mythos Information Sharing Big Bank Earnings Show Digital Activity Drives Deposits OCC Clears JPMorgan Chase After Trade Surveillance Program Upgrade Accounts Receivable Gets an AI Upgrade BNY’s AI Strategy Signals a New Era of Platform Banking Bank of England Probes AI Threats to UK Financial Stability Rising AI Adoption Is Driving Up Enterprise Costs Google Faces EU Order to Share Search Data With Rivals Delivery Robots Lead Grab’s AI Expansion Circle Chief Says China Could Issue Stablecoin in 3 to 5 Years Amex Acquires Hyper to Boost AI and Expense Management Offerings Anthropic Ready to Offer Mythos to British Banks Issuers Face a New Reality as Credit Goes Real Time How Payments Gaps Are Limiting Deposit Growth at Community Banks AI May Run Payments but Humans Still Own the Risk 90% of Millennials Feel Pressure at the Grocery Store The New Checkout Is Where the Best Offer Wins Insurance Sector’s Private Credit Ties Has Investors Concerned Oil Price Spike Erodes Small Business Confidence, NFIB Says Synctera Looks to Beef Up Compliance With Cable Acquisition Velera Launches Cloud Platform to Modernize Credit Union Tech Kraken Lands $200 Million Investment From Deutsche Börse Walmart CFO Says Marketplace Revenue Up 20% Over 2025 The US Operationalized Stablecoins This Week, But Who’s Using Them? AI Is the New Sales Associate in Physical Retail Fed Finds Stablecoins Idle, Confirms PYMNTS Usage Gap BMO Accelerates Quantum Push With New Tech Institute Bank of France Pushes EU to Rein in Non-Euro-Backed Stablecoins Perplexity Uses Plaid to Personalize Financial Insights Blackstone Accelerates Push to Lead AI Infrastructure Boom Feds Warn Major Banks of Anthropic Mythos Cyber Threat
US Treasury Says Smarter AML Starts With Better Identity
PYMNTS · 2026-04-24 · via PYMNTS.com

A Wednesday (April 22) hearing on sanctions and illicit finance placed the machinery of anti-money laundering (AML) under scrutiny, as lawmakers and Treasury officials examined whether existing frameworks are keeping pace with the speed and structure of modern payments.

Formally titled “Evaluating the Effectiveness of U.S. Sanctions Programs,” the back and forth between members of the House Subcommittee on National Security, Illicit Finance, and International Financial Institutions and Jonathan Burke, assistant secretary for terrorist financing at the Treasury Department, moved beyond geopolitics to consider how financial institutions screen transactions, manage data flows and deploy technology in compliance regimes.

Lawmakers repeatedly returned to a central concern: whether banks are expending resources on low-value alerts while more sophisticated threats move through less visible channels.

Subcommittee chairman Rep. Warren Davidson, R-Ohio, crystallized that mindset when he noted that suspicious activity reporting thresholds have remained unchanged for decades, adding that “the concern is that we get a lot of noise and not enough signal.”

That statement aligns with the broader pressures outlined in the recent PYMNTS Intelligence report on fraud and financial crime done in collaboration with Block. Financial institutions now confront a setting in which unauthorized-party fraud accounts for the majority of incidents and losses, driven by credential theft and account takeover schemes. At the same time, regulatory and operational demands are converging. Nearly half of institutions cite regulatory requirements as a primary challenge, while a comparable share point to faster and more varied payment flows as sources of strain.

From Reporting to Risk-Based Enforcement

Against that backdrop, Burke framed the current moment as one requiring a recalibration of priorities. In his testimony, he emphasized that illicit finance threats now span both longstanding risks and newer vectors shaped by digital systems. Fraud, he noted, has become a defining challenge, enabled by social media, artificial intelligence (AI) and rapid payments infrastructure.

Advertisement: Scroll to Continue

Burke argued that addressing those threats requires coordination across agencies and deeper engagement with the private sector.

“A lot of the illicit finance issues require a whole-of-government approach,” he told congresspeople at the hearing, adding that “banks have been seen and see themselves as the front line in the fight against financial crime.”

His testimony repeatedly returned to the principle of risk-based supervision. Rather than applying uniform compliance burdens, regulators are seeking to direct attention toward higher-risk actors and activities.

As Burke explained in response to lawmakers’ concerns about rising compliance costs, “more resources are spent against higher risk activities … a community bank is going to have a different risk profile than a major global institution.” This approach reflects a shift away from checklist compliance toward a model that prioritizes outcomes and effectiveness.

Digital Identity

The hearing also underscored the growing importance of digital identity in payments ecosystems.

Rep. Bill Foster, D-Ill., highlighted the fragmentation of identity standards across jurisdictions and the operational challenges that fragmentation creates for financial institutions. In a setting increasingly shaped by automated agents and machine-driven transactions, he observed, banks must be able to determine “who is the legally traceable human behind this agent that has just contacted my agent.”

That question sits at the intersection of payments and AML. As transactions accelerate and move across multiple platforms, identity verification becomes both more complex and more central to risk management. The PYMNTS Intelligence data reinforces that dynamic, showing that institutions are turning to behavioral analytics and machine learning as foundational tools for detecting fraud patterns in real time.

Burke acknowledged that shift, noting that financial institutions are increasingly capable of improving know your customer (KYC) and customer validation by drawing on broader data sources and advanced technologies. The implication is that compliance effectiveness will depend less on static rules and more on the quality of data and the sophistication of analytical systems.

AI, Sanctions and System Design

AI featured in both the testimony and the broader discussion. Treasury has already begun to incorporate AI and digital identity into its regulatory modernization efforts, including work tied to emerging frameworks for digital assets and payments systems.

At the same time, Burke pointed to structural inefficiencies within existing sanctions regimes. Screening processes generate large volumes of false positives, diverting attention from higher-risk threats. The current effort to review sanctions lists and refine compliance expectations is intended to address that imbalance, shifting resources toward activities that carry greater national security implications.

Institutions are being asked to move away from volume-driven compliance metrics and toward systems that deliver actionable intelligence. In practical terms, that means fewer alerts, but more meaningful ones, supported by technology capable of distinguishing routine activity from emerging threats.

A System Under Revision

The hearing made clear that both lawmakers and regulators recognize the limits of legacy approaches. The combination of faster payments, digital assets and increasingly organized fraud networks has exposed gaps in systems designed for a different era. Data fragmentation, outdated thresholds and uneven adoption of advanced tools all contribute to those gaps.

“The message that we’re hearing from the [financial services] industry,” he told lawmakers, “is that they can be more effective in performing their compliance requirements around KYC and understanding their customers and validating their identities using the technologies that are available, including different data sources.”

Burke’s testimony suggested that the response will involve both regulatory adjustment and technological adoption. “I do think that sanctions are a valid tool to support policy objectives,” he said, while cautioning that effectiveness should be measured by outcomes rather than scale.

In that sense, the discussion in Washington reflects a broader transition within financial services. AML and sanctions compliance are moving toward continuous monitoring, data integration and intelligence-led decisioning.