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How PayPal uses deep learning and detective work to fight fr
Source: Derrick Harris


A visual diagram of a deep neural network for facial recognition. Source: Facebook


Hui Wang has seen the nature of online fraud change a lot in the 11 years she’s been at PayPal. In fact, a continuous evolution of methods is kind of the nature of cybercrime. As the good guys catch onto one approach, the bad guys try to avoid detection by using another.

Today, said Wang, PayPal’s senior director of global risk sciences, “The fraudsters we’re interacting with are… very unique and very innovative. …Our fraud problem is a lot more complex than anyone can think of.”

In deep learning, though, Wang and her team might have found a way to help level the playing field between PayPal and criminals who want exploit the online payment platform.

Deep learning is a somewhat new approach to machine learning and artificial intelligence that has caught fire over the past few years thanks to companies such as Google, Facebook, Microsoft and Baidu, and a handful of prominent researchers (some of whom now work for those companies). The field draws a lot of comparisons to the workings of the human brain because deep learning systems use artificial neural network algorithms, although “inspired by the brain” might be a more accurate description than “modeled after the brain.”
How DeepFace sees Calista Flockhart. Source: Facebook

Essentially, the stacks of neural networks that comprise deep learning models are very good at recognizing patterns and features of the data they’re trained on, which has led to some huge advances in computer vision, speech recognition, text analysis, machine listening and even video-game playing in the past few years. You can learn more about the field at our Structure Data conference later this month, which includes deep learning and artificial intelligence experts from Facebook, Microsoft, Yahoo, Enlitic and other companies.

It turns out deep learning models are also good at identifying the complex patterns and characteristics of cybercrime and online fraud. Machine-learning-based pattern recognition has long been a major part of fraud detection practices, but Wang said PayPal has seen a “major leap forward” in its abilities since it began investigating precursor (what she calls “non-linear”) techniques to deep learning several years ago. PayPal has been working with deep learning itself for the past two or three years, she said.

Some of these efforts are already running in production as part of the company’s anti-fraud systems, often in conjunction with human experts in what Wang describes as a “detective-like methodology.” The deep learning algorithms are able to analyze potentially tens of thousands of latent features (time signals, actors and geographic location are some easy examples) that might make up a particular type of fraud, and are even able to detect “sub modus operandi,” or different variants of the same scheme, she said.



Some of PayPal’s fraud-management options for developers.
PayPal

The patterns are much more complex than “If someone does X, then the result is Y,” so it takes artificial intelligence to analyze them at a level much deeper than humans can. “Actually,” Wang said, “that’s the beauty of deep learning.”

Once the models detect possible fraud, human “detectives” can get to work assessing what’s real, what’s not and what to do next.

PayPal uses a champions-and-challengers approach to deciding which fraud-detection models to rely on most heavily, and deep learning is very close to becoming the champion. “We’ve seen roughly a 10 percent delta on top of today’s champion,” Wang said, which is very significant.

And as the fraudulent behavior on PayPal’s platform continues to grow more complex, she’s hopeful deep learning will give her team the ability to adapt to these new patterns faster than before. It’s possible, for example, that PayPal might some day be able to deploy models that take live data from its system and become smarter, by retraining themselves, in real time.

“We’re doing that to a certain degree,” Wang said, “but I think there’s still more to be done.”


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