口头答复 · 2024-04-02 · 第 14 届国会

反钓鱼诈骗共责框架发布

Unveiling of Shared Responsibility Framework for Phishing Scams

AI 治理与监管AI 经济与产业AI 与公共部门AI 战略 争议度 2 · 温和质询

议员质询钓鱼诈骗共责框架发布时间、Money Lock功能使用率及是否强制银行参与。政府回应将于2024年内公布框架,Money Lock账户超7.8万个,主要用户为50岁以上,MAS暂不强制银行参与。质询关注国际经验及老年人数字素养,政府强调提升宣传力度。

关键要点

  • 共责框架年底发布
  • Money Lock用户分布
  • 暂不强制银行参与
政府立场

积极推广Money Lock,年底推共责框架

质询立场

关注老年人数字素养及宣传不足

政策信号

强化银行防诈骗措施

"The Government will take into account suggestions and feedback received from the public consultation on the Shared Responsibility Framework."

参与人员(5)

完整译文(中文)

Hansard 英文原文译文 · 翻译日期:2026-05-02

16号 陈德明议员问总理:(a) 共享责任框架(Shared Responsibility Framework,SRF)针对网络钓鱼诈骗何时发布;(b) 我们本地银行提供的“资金锁定”(Money Lock)功能的使用率是多少,按银行客户年龄分布;(c) 新加坡金融管理局(MAS)是否计划近期强制所有银行机构参与该计划。

文化、社区与青年部及贸易与工业部国务部长(陈振声先生)(代表总理)答:先生,政府将考虑于2023年12月20日结束的共享责任框架公众咨询中收到的建议和反馈。我们计划于今年晚些时候公布对咨询的回应并实施该框架。

关于资金锁定,资金锁定通过阻止在线访问部分资金,为客户提供额外的数字诈骗保护。自三家本地银行于去年11月推出资金锁定以来,已有超过78,000个资金锁定账户设立,截至2024年3月,锁定储蓄超过66亿新元。在使用资金锁定的客户中,50岁及以上占44%,30至50岁占41%,30岁以下占15%。本地银行将继续提高意识,鼓励各年龄段客户采用该功能。

其他主要零售银行将于2024年中引入资金锁定,绝大多数零售存款客户将可使用该选项。因此,新加坡金融管理局无计划强制所有银行机构采用资金锁定。

议长:陈议员。

陈德明议员(淡滨尼):议长,感谢陈振声国务部长的答复。我有两个追加问题。第一个关于咨询。显然,MAS进行了广泛的咨询。我想问其他司法管辖区在此问题上采取了哪些做法?哪些有效,哪些将被新加坡采纳?

第二个关于资金锁定。我与许多居民交谈时,他们是从我这里听说的,都觉得这是个好东西,但这是他们第一次听说。我们如何扩大对最需要此功能的群体——可能是互联网或数字技能较弱的老年人——的认知?

陈振声:先生,感谢议员的问题。关于第二个问题,我们正与银行合作加强资金锁定的宣传和推广,不仅限于本地银行,正如我之前提到的,其他银行也将在2024年中纳入资金锁定功能。因此,我们正共同努力提高认知度和采用率。

关于于12月20日结束的SRF咨询,我们收到了许多非常有见地的反馈。我想强调几点。

首先,收到的咨询反馈非常深思熟虑。有些人建议扩大SRF涵盖更多诈骗类型和更多实体,这完全合理,我们也在议会中讨论过。

但也有不少公众反馈关注如何考虑消费者责任及其在赔付中的作用,如何鼓励消费者承担责任并减少道德风险。我认为这是非常重要的一点,责任必须共享,这也是SRF的核心。

同时,我们正在研究其他司法管辖区如何应对诈骗,包括不同的共享责任模式。英国和澳大利亚是例子。以英国的有条件赔偿模式(CRM)为例,自实施以来,授权推送支付(APP)诈骗案件比2022年同期增长了34%。

我提及此事是想说明不同做法需适应不同司法管辖区,我们正采取审慎细致的研究方法,避免产生加剧道德风险的意外后果,同时确保保护消费者。

议长:陈武明博士。

陈武明博士(裕廊):议长,感谢国务部长的答复。国务部长能否向议会保证,SRF的制定将考虑议会内的辩论及提出的建议?这是我的第一个问题,因为过去几年有多位议员提出过建议。

第二个问题是,框架是否会采用前瞻性视角,扫描新兴诈骗手法?我之所以问,是因为两年前我和其他议员在议会中谈及深度伪造诈骗的风险,如今全球出现了AI语音克隆和深度伪造攻击公众人物、复制公众人物甚至克隆个人声音的新兴技术。

SRF会考虑这些因素吗?因为道德风险有时并非突然发生,而是存在于一系列强制或非强制错误的连续体中,取决于情况及公众对诈骗的认知。

陈振声:先生,我向陈武明博士保证,这些正是我们关注的反馈和建议,包括他本人、陈德明议员及其他议员提出的,关注诈骗类型快速演变。

我们将SRF聚焦于网络钓鱼,但也清楚恶意软件诈骗对新加坡人遭遇的诈骗数量有贡献。因此,我们会将这些因素纳入考虑,这也是为何咨询中探讨是否扩大诈骗类型和相关实体的原因。但同时,面对诈骗类型快速变化,我们需要采取多种方法应对。

SRF是我们采用瀑布式责任分配的一种方式。我之前提到,我们也在研究其他司法管辖区的不同做法,但并非所有做法都适合我们,我们需要谨慎研究。

同时,回应陈德明议员的观点,资金锁定是我们鼓励民众采用的另一项功能,用以保护部分资金。我们还有强有力的综合公众教育和宣传活动,这是防范诈骗的最佳“疫苗”。此外,在设备层面,一些银行确保禁止侧载应用程序。

关键是我们都应采取上游防范措施,提高对诈骗的警觉,关注诈骗,并鼓励亲友保持警惕。

感谢议员们对这一重要议题的贡献。我们将在推出SRF时充分考虑这些意见,SRF将是一个“动态”文件,同时我们也将投入大量精力提高意识,防止诈骗发生。

下午1时30分

议长:秩序。问答时间结束。书记员将开始宣读当日议程。

[根据议事规则第22(3)条,若议员未要求将其名下的问题推迟至后续会议日或撤回,未在问答时间结束前提问的问题的书面答复将收录于附录中。]

英文原文

SPRS Hansard 原始记录 · 抓取日期:2026-05-02

16 Mr Desmond Choo asked the Prime Minister (a) when will the Shared Responsibility Framework for phishing scams be released; (b) what is the take-up rate of the Money Lock feature offered by our local banks, broken down by ages of bank customers; and (c) whether the MAS will make it mandatory for all banking institutions to participate in this initiative in the near future.

The Minister of State for Culture, Community and Youth and Trade and Industry (Mr Alvin Tan) (for the Prime Minister) : Sir, the Government will take into account suggestions and feedback received from the public consultation on the Shared Responsibility Framework (SRF) that closed on 20 December 2023. We aim to publish our response to the consultation and implement the SRF later this year.

For Money Lock, Money Lock gives customers added protection against digital scams by blocking online access to a portion of their funds. Since the three local banks launched Money Lock in November, more than 78,000 Money Lock accounts have been set up, with over S$6.6 billion of savings set aside in March 2024. Among customers who have used Money Lock, those aged 50 and above make up 44%, those between 30 and 50 years old comprise 41%, and those under 30 years of age form 15%. Local banks will continue to raise awareness and encourage adoption amongst their customer base across all demographic segments.

Other major retail banks will introduce Money Lock by mid-2024 and the vast majority of retail depositors will have the Money Lock option available to them. Hence, the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) has no plans to make Money Lock mandatory for all banking institutions.

Mr Speaker : Mr Choo.

Mr Desmond Choo (Tampines) : Mr Speaker, I thank Minister of State Alvin Tan for his response. I have two supplementary questions. The first one is on the consultation. Clearly, MAS has done a very wide consultation. I would like to ask what has been the approaches taken by other jurisdictions with regard to this issue? What has worked and what will be incorporated for Singapore?

The second one would be on Money Lock. When I spoke to many of my residents, they heard about this from me and they said it is a great thing. But this is the first time they are hearing it. So, how can we expand the awareness amongst the people who need it most which are likely to be the seniors, who might not be very Internet or digitally savvy?

Mr Alvin Tan : Sir, I thank the Member for his questions. The second question is that we are enhancing, MAS together with the banks, to increase awareness and encourage adoption of Money Lock across not just the local banks but, as I said earlier on, by mid-2024 other banks will also incorporate Money Lock. So, there is a concerted effort to raise awareness and to increase adoption of Money Lock.

On the SRF consultation ended on 20 December, we received a number of very good consultation responses. I would like to highlight a couple of interesting points.

The first is that the consultation responses that we received were very thoughtful. Some had asked whether we could expand the SRF to include more scam variants, more entities – that is entirely reasonable and we talked about that in this House.

But there is also an interesting number of responses by members of public who submitted the consultation responses that talked about how do you factor consumers' responsibility and the contributing role in determining the payouts. And in this case, how do you encourage consumer responsibility and also to reduce moral hazards? I think this is a very important point that responsibilities must be shared and I think that is the essence of the SRF.

At the same time, we are studying about how other jurisdictions are deploying their different approaches to scams, including different shared responsibilities. The United Kingdom (UK) is one, Australia is one. If you look at the UK's contingent reimbursement model, the number of Authorised Push Payment (APP) fraud cases had increased by 34% since they implemented the CRM compared to the same period in 2022.

So, I raised this just to share that different approaches have to fit different jurisdictions and what we are doing is taking a very concerted, careful study approach so that we do not have or come into unintended consequences that will exacerbate moral hazard, but bearing in mind that we want to protect consumers in the process as well.

Mr Speaker : Dr Tan Wu Meng.

Dr Tan Wu Meng (Jurong) : Mr Speaker, I like to thank Minister of State for his answer. Can Minister of State reassure the House that in the development of the SRF, there will also be consideration to what has been debated in Parliament as well as suggestions that have been raised? That is my first question, because a number of Members have raised suggestions over the past few years.

The second question to Minister of State is will the framework also adopt a forward-looking horizon scan of emerging scam modalities? And I say this because two years ago, in this House, I and some others talked about the risk of deepfake scams coming through and today we see around the world the rise of AI voice cloning and deepfake attacks on public figures, replicating public figures and even the cloning of people's voices which is an emerging technology.

Will the SRF consider all this because moral hazard sometimes is not a step off a cliff that people fall off or get cut off by? It can sometimes also exist in a continuum of forced, or unforced errors based on circumstances and what public understanding is of the scams out there.

Mr Alvin Tan : Sir, I would like to assure Dr Tan Wu Meng that these, in fact, are the types of feedback and suggestions, including by the Member himself and Mr Desmond Choo and other Members of this House to look at the rapidly evolving nature of scam typologies.

We focus the SRF on phishing, but we are well aware that malware scams have also contributed to the number of scams that Singaporeans have encountered. And so, we will factor all of these in and that is why the consultation had also, as I mentioned earlier on, looked at suggestions on whether we could expand the kind of scam variants or the entities in the SRF. But, at the same time, as we combat this rapidly evolving scam nature and different typologies, we need to take a suite of approaches towards combating this.

The SRF is one way in which we will ascribe responsibility using a waterfall approach. And I said earlier on that we are exploring other jurisdictions' different approaches. Not every jurisdiction's approach will fit and we need to study that carefully.

But at the same time, to Member Desmond Choo's point, Money Lock is another feature that we are trying to encourage people to adopt to safeguard a portion of your funds. We also have a very strong consolidated public education and public awareness campaign that is one of the best inoculations against scams. Also, at your device level, some of the banks have ensured that there is no side-loading of apps.

The key thing here is for all of us to take an upstream approach, be aware of scams, look out for scams and also to encourage your friends, family members to be very much wary of this.

So, thank you for Members' contributions to this very important topic. We will factor all of these into consideration when we roll out SRF which is a "live" document, and also, put in a significant amount of effort to raise awareness and to prevent scams from happening.

1.30 pm

Mr Speaker : Order. End of Question Time. The Clerk will now proceed to read the Orders of the day.

[ Pursuant to Standing Order No 22(3), provided that Members had not asked for questions standing in their names to be postponed to a later Sitting day or withdrawn, written answers to questions not reached by the end of Question Time are reproduced in the Appendix .]