I4C, RBIH sign pact to combat cyber fraud with AI technology

Published : May 12, 2026, 05:30 PM IST
Ministry of Home Affairs (Photo/ANI)

Synopsis

The MHA's I4C wing and the Reserve Bank Innovation Hub have signed an MoU to combat cyber fraud using AI. The pact aims to swiftly detect and eliminate hidden mule accounts by using data from I4C's suspect registry to train AI systems.

The Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre (I4C) wing of the Ministry of Home Affairs on Tuesday signed a pact with Reserve Bank Innovation Hub (RBIH), unleashing the power of artificial intelligence to combat cyber fraud.

The move will swiftly detect and cull hidden mule accounts by feeding the data from the I4C's suspect registry to the AI-driven fraud detection system and serve the citizens as their next-generation shield against cybercrime.

The Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) aimed at strengthening collaboration in combating cyber-enabled financial fraud and curtailing mule accounts across the banking and digital payments ecosystem.

The MoU aims to facilitate cooperation in the areas of fraud-risk intelligence sharing, analytical support, and operational coordination for strengthening proactive fraud detection and prevention mechanisms.

Amit Shah on Cyber-Secure Bharat

Union Home Minister Amit Shah, posted on X, "Modi govt is tirelessly working for cyber-secure Bharat. Mule accounts are big hurdle in curbing cyber crimes. Today, the I4C under MHA signed an MoU with Reserve Bank Innovation Hub (RBIH), unleashing the power of Artificial Intelligence to combat cyber fraud. The move will swiftly detect and cull hidden mule accounts by feeding the data from the I4C's Suspect Registry to the AI-driven fraud detection system and serve the citizens as their next-gen shield against cybercrime."

The MoU was signed by Smt Roopa M, IG (Admin), I4C and Sahil Kinni, CEO, RBIH in the presence of Rohit Jain, Deputy Governor, RBI; Anand Swaroop, Special Secretary (Internal Security), MHA; Rakesh Rathi, Joint Secretary (Cyber and Information Security), MHA; Rajesh Kumar, CEO, I4C; and other senior officers from RBI, RBIH and I4C.

Strengthening Fraud Detection with AI

Under the MoU, I4C and RBIH will collaborate for the sharing of mule account-related intelligence and suspect identifiers from I4C-MHA's suspect registry to strengthen AI-driven fraud detection systems such as MuleHunter.ai™ implemented across banks.

RBIH will utilise the datasets for training and enhancement of AI-driven fraud-risk assessment models, including MuleHunter.ai™.

About I4C and RBIH

The I4C has been actively working towards strengthening and collaborating for India's cybercrime response ecosystem through platforms such as the National Cybercrime Reporting Portal (NCRP), suspect registry and other intelligence-sharing mechanisms.

RBIH, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Reserve Bank of India, has been promoting innovation in the financial sector through technology-led initiatives and development of AI-enabled fraud detection frameworks aimed at strengthening the safety and resilience of the digital payments ecosystem and thereby increasing the trust of the citizen in the digital banking ecosystem. (ANI)

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by Asianet Newsable English staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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