口頭答覆 · 2024-04-02 · 屆國會 14
反釣魚詐騙共責框架釋出
議員質詢釣魚詐騙共責框架釋出時間、Money Lock功能使用率及是否強制銀行參與。政府回應將於2024年內公佈框架,Money Lock賬戶超7.8萬個,主要使用者為50歲以上,MAS暫不強制銀行參與。質詢關注國際經驗及老年人數字素養,政府強調提升宣傳力度。
關鍵要點
- • 共責框架年底釋出
- • Money Lock使用者分佈
- • 暫不強制銀行參與
積極推廣Money Lock,年底推共責框架
關注老年人數字素養及宣傳不足
強化銀行防詐騙措施
“The Government will take into account suggestions and feedback received from the public consultation on the Shared Responsibility Framework.”
參與人員 (5)
- Alvin Tan
- Community and Youth and Trade and Industry
- Desmond Choo
- Minister of State for Culture
- Tan Wu Meng
完整譯文(中文)
Hansard 原始記錄 · 2026-05-02
16號 陳德明議員問總理:(a) 共享責任框架(Shared Responsibility Framework,SRF)針對網路釣魚詐騙何時釋出;(b) 我們本地銀行提供的“資金鎖定”(Money Lock)功能的使用率是多少,按銀行客戶年齡分佈;(c) 新加坡金融管理局(MAS)是否計劃近期強制所有銀行機構參與該計劃。
文化、社群與青年部及貿易與工業部國務部長(陳振聲先生)(代表總理)答:先生,政府將考慮於2023年12月20日結束的共享責任框架公眾諮詢中收到的建議和反饋。我們計劃於今年晚些時候公佈對諮詢的回應並實施該框架。
關於資金鎖定,資金鎖定通過阻止線上訪問部分資金,為客戶提供額外的數字詐騙保護。自三家本地銀行於去年11月推出資金鎖定以來,已有超過78,000個資金鎖定賬戶設立,截至2024年3月,鎖定儲蓄超過66億新元。在使用資金鎖定的客戶中,50歲及以上佔44%,30至50歲佔41%,30歲以下佔15%。本地銀行將繼續提高意識,鼓勵各年齡段客戶採用該功能。
其他主要零售銀行將於2024年中引入資金鎖定,絕大多數零售存款客戶將可使用該選項。因此,新加坡金融管理局無計劃強制所有銀行機構採用資金鎖定。
議長:陳議員。
陳德明議員(淡濱尼):議長,感謝陳振聲國務部長的答覆。我有兩個追加問題。第一個關於諮詢。顯然,MAS進行了廣泛的諮詢。我想問其他司法管轄區在此問題上採取了哪些做法?哪些有效,哪些將被新加坡採納?
第二個關於資金鎖定。我與許多居民交談時,他們是從我這裡聽說的,都覺得這是個好東西,但這是他們第一次聽說。我們如何擴大對最需要此功能的群體——可能是網際網路或數字技能較弱的老年人——的認知?
陳振聲:先生,感謝議員的問題。關於第二個問題,我們正與銀行合作加強資金鎖定的宣傳和推廣,不僅限於本地銀行,正如我之前提到的,其他銀行也將在2024年中納入資金鎖定功能。因此,我們正共同努力提高認知度和採用率。
關於於12月20日結束的SRF諮詢,我們收到了許多非常有見地的反饋。我想強調幾點。
首先,收到的諮詢反饋非常深思熟慮。有些人建議擴大SRF涵蓋更多詐騙型別和更多實體,這完全合理,我們也在議會中討論過。
但也有不少公眾反饋關注如何考慮消費者責任及其在賠付中的作用,如何鼓勵消費者承擔責任並減少道德風險。我認為這是非常重要的一點,責任必須共享,這也是SRF的核心。
同時,我們正在研究其他司法管轄區如何應對詐騙,包括不同的共享責任模式。英國和澳大利亞是例子。以英國的有條件賠償模式(CRM)為例,自實施以來,授權推送支付(APP)詐騙案件比2022年同期增長了34%。
我提及此事是想說明不同做法需適應不同司法管轄區,我們正採取審慎細緻的研究方法,避免產生加劇道德風險的意外後果,同時確保保護消費者。
議長:陳武明博士。
陳武明博士(裕廊):議長,感謝國務部長的答覆。國務部長能否向議會保證,SRF的制定將考慮議會內的辯論及提出的建議?這是我的第一個問題,因為過去幾年有多位議員提出過建議。
第二個問題是,框架是否會採用前瞻性視角,掃描新興詐騙手法?我之所以問,是因為兩年前我和其他議員在議會中談及深度偽造詐騙的風險,如今全球出現了AI語音克隆和深度偽造攻擊公眾人物、複製公眾人物甚至克隆個人聲音的新興技術。
SRF會考慮這些因素嗎?因為道德風險有時並非突然發生,而是存在於一系列強制或非強制錯誤的連續體中,取決於情況及公眾對詐騙的認知。
陳振聲:先生,我向陳武明博士保證,這些正是我們關注的反饋和建議,包括他本人、陳德明議員及其他議員提出的,關注詐騙型別快速演變。
我們將SRF聚焦於網路釣魚,但也清楚惡意軟體詐騙對新加坡人遭遇的詐騙數量有貢獻。因此,我們會將這些因素納入考慮,這也是為何諮詢中探討是否擴大詐騙型別和相關實體的原因。但同時,面對詐騙型別快速變化,我們需要採取多種方法應對。
SRF是我們採用瀑布式責任分配的一種方式。我之前提到,我們也在研究其他司法管轄區的不同做法,但並非所有做法都適合我們,我們需要謹慎研究。
同時,回應陳德明議員的觀點,資金鎖定是我們鼓勵民眾採用的另一項功能,用以保護部分資金。我們還有強有力的綜合公眾教育和宣傳活動,這是防範詐騙的最佳“疫苗”。此外,在裝置層面,一些銀行確保禁止側載應用程式。
關鍵是我們都應採取上游防範措施,提高對詐騙的警覺,關注詐騙,並鼓勵親友保持警惕。
感謝議員們對這一重要議題的貢獻。我們將在推出SRF時充分考慮這些意見,SRF將是一個“動態”檔案,同時我們也將投入大量精力提高意識,防止詐騙發生。
下午1時30分
議長:秩序。問答時間結束。書記員將開始宣讀當日議程。
[根據議事規則第22(3)條,若議員未要求將其名下的問題推遲至後續會議日或撤回,未在問答時間結束前提問的問題的書面答覆將收錄於附錄中。]
英文原文
SPRS Hansard · Fetched: 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 .]