
India’s rapid transition to a digital-first economy has hit a massive, expensive wall. In 2025, nearly 2.5 million people fell victim to digital scams, resulting in a staggering $2.5 billion in losses—a 4,300% increase since 2021.
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) is now attempting to play catch-up, proposing a suite of new regulations, including transaction lags and mandatory authentication for vulnerable populations, to stop the bleeding.
However, critics argue these measures are merely speed bumps that threaten the core promise of digital immediacy while failing to address the sophisticated nature of these criminal networks. Experts warn that implementing these bureaucratic hurdles will be both technically difficult and costly, with those expenses inevitably passed down to the consumer.
While the RBI considers these interventions, the reality remains that the country’s digital infrastructure has outpaced its security safeguards and public literacy.
As the government debates whether to implement real-time fraud detection tools like Mulehunter.AI or force banks to overhaul their payment architecture, the victims of these scams are left paying the price for a system that prioritized convenience over ironclad security.
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