Digital Identity Verification: Onboarding Guide and the Growing Role of AI

Prathiksha Shetty
Prathiksha Shetty
October 3, 2024
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Digital Identity Verification: Onboarding Guide and the Growing Role of AI

Key Highlights:

  • Traditional verification methods are prone to errors, delays, and compliance inefficiencies, resulting in higher customer drop-offs and privacy concerns.
  • AI-powered tools streamline digital identity verification, speeding up the process, reducing fraud risks, and improving compliance.
  • AI improves biometric and document verification through advanced facial recognition, liveness detection, and real-time document analysis, identifying tampered documents instantly.
  • Arya AI offers modular API-driven solutions that allow financial institutions to build customizable onboarding workflows, enhancing security and reducing fraud.

Modern onboarding journeys are primarily online due to consumers’ heightened expectations for personalized and frictionless interactions. Its popularity is such that around 87% of financial service seekers now start their consumer journey online.

Digital onboarding allows organizations to meet contemporary client expectations while meeting the relevant KYC/AML guidelines. However, as fraudulent activities get more sophisticated, confirming the identity of customers online is a growing concern. The pressure is on the organizations to improve their identity verification methods.. The immediate reaction to this is turning to traditional verification techniques but they’re fraught with challenges.

Bottlenecks in Traditional Identity Verification

Traditional identity verification systems slow down the onboarding process, with challenges that range from human errors to inefficiencies in meeting compliance standards. Time delays in manual identity checks always lead to high drop-off rates as customers move to quicker services. The complexity of regulations like Anti-Money Laundering (AML) and KYC adds further strain. Data vulnerabilities in older systems also cause privacy concerns that undermine customer trust. What's the solution to these bottlenecks? Digital identity verification!

What is Digital Identity Verification?

what is digital identity verification

Digital identity verification is a multi-step process and works by analyzing several trust factors—combining document verification with biometric checks:

  1. Data Submission: Users input Personally Identifiable Information (PII), such as names, addresses, and official identification documents, into an online channel, like a smartphone app or website. They upload images of these documents, like Aadhaar, passports, or driver's licenses, along with a selfie for biometric comparison.
  2. Document Verification: The system examines the uploaded ID for validity. It checks for critical details like expiration dates and document structure. Document fraud detection tools check MRZ (Machine Readable Zone) codes, fonts, and holograms to detect if the document hasn’t been tampered with.
  3. Biometric Verification: Facial recognition matches the user’s selfie with the image on the uploaded document. At the same time, liveness detection confirms whether the user is not a static image and is actively interacting with the verification system.
  4. Risk Assessment: All this data goes through the risk assessment pipeline to evaluate the likelihood of fraud. The verification system cross-checks user information against databases, looking for discrepancies or potential risks.

Key Practices in Digital Identity Verification

From the personal information uploaded by the user to the risk assessment pipeline, organizations must use multi-layered online digital identity verification methods. While the highest priority is reducing fraud risks, institutions also weigh in scalability and customer experience.

1. Authentication of Personally Identifiable Information (PII)

Document verification tools check the authenticity of government-issued IDs, such as passports, national IDs, and driver’s licenses.

  • Intelligent Document Processing (IDP): Intelligent document processing extracts, classifies, and validates data from document images in real-time. It identifies key information, such as names, addresses, and document numbers, converting them into usable formats while cross-referencing the data for inconsistencies.
  • Template Matching and Security Feature Analysis: It analyzes patterns, fonts, and layout to check if documents align with recognized templates. Security features like watermarks, holograms, microprints, and MRZ are cross-checked against the standards of legitimate documents.

2. Biological Marker Identification

Beyond facial recognition and liveness detection, biometric identification has expanded into more intricate methods.

  • Iris Scanning: A reliable method that captures the unique patterns of a user’s iris, which offers higher accuracy but is harder to replicate.
  • Voice Print Analysis: An advanced method that identifies users based on vocal patterns, tone, and pitch. This adds an extra layer of security in remote environments where users might not have access to traditional ID verification tools.

3. Data Cross-Referencing

Database checks work by comparing user information across multiple trusted sources.

  • Government Databases: Access to government records allows verification platforms to instantly cross-check submitted details against official sources.
  • Financial Institutions & Credit Bureaus: By linking with financial databases and credit bureaus, verification systems can check the user’s financial stability and also flag inconsistencies— like a mismatch in credit history that shows identity theft or fraud attempts.
  • Global Fraud Watchlists: Financial institutions also tap into global watchlists and sanction databases to screen against Politically Exposed Persons (PEPs) and individuals flagged by international bodies.

4. Two-Factor Security Layers

Two-Factor Authentication (2FA) remains a common identity verification method, requiring users to present two forms of verification—one they know, like a password, and one they possess, such as a One-Time Passcode (OTP) sent via SMS or app notification.

The Growing Role of AI in Identity Verification for Digital Onboarding

In 2023, research showcased that using AI in identity verification will reduce the time for digital onboarding from 11 minutes to just 8 minutes in 2028—a 30% drop. Studies also highlight the financial benefits of using AI for onboarding. By 2028, AI in digital ID verification will save banks $900 million in operational costs.

  • Advanced Document Verification with AI

AI document verification systems extract critical information from ID documents in real time, classify them, and compare against stored templates for consistency. Such document checks also catch subtle inconsistencies instantly.

  • AI-Driven Biometric Verification

Biometric verification has become more effective with AI. Facial analysis systems that rely on AI compare live user selfies against photo IDs, even considering variations caused by lighting, facial hair, or aging. AI Liveness detection technology analyzes specific movements—like blinking or nodding—to confirm authenticity, making fraud attempts much more difficult.

  • Deep Learning in Behavioral Analysis for Risk Mitigation

Deep learning algorithms detect discrepancies in how users interact—tracking things like the time they log in, physical location, and their interaction habits. For instance, AI-powered transaction monitoring can assesses spending habits and financial activity to spot potential risks.

Smart Onboarding with Arya AI

Arya AI is making onboarding smarter. Leveraging AI, Arya AI’s onboarding solutions allow financial institutions to reduce drop-offs, mitigate frauds (including AI-driven frauds), and detect tampered documents. Arya AI also allows financial institutions to build customizable onboarding workflows through a modular suite of APIs. Institutions can combine tools like KYC Extraction, Face Verification, and Passive Face Liveness Detection, Bank Statement Analyzer, and more, to create workflows that align with their needs – completing the loop for digital identity verification.

Conclusion

Digital identity verification ensures secure and compliant onboarding. The goal is to verify users effectively without compromising customer experience. This is where AI for digital identity verification is reshaping the onboarding experience. With AI-driven tools, businesses can now offer faster, secure, and user-friendly verification processes.

Adopting custom onboarding workflows streamlines compliance and delivers a seamless customer experience. Financial institutions must embrace AI to stay ahead, reduce drop-offs, and safeguard your business from identity-based threats.

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