Ai finds ‘soaring’ cases of fraud in french home renovation applications
Ai finds ‘soaring’ cases of fraud in french home renovation applications"
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
MORE THAN 40,000 CASES WERE DETECTED IN 2024, THE HOUSING AGENCY STATES Authorities in France used artificial intelligence (AI) to discover 44,000 fraudulent renovation grant applications in
2024, amounting to €230 million, new figures show. Figures from the Agence nationale de l'habitat (national housing agency, ANAH), originally reported by FranceInter this week, show
that incidences of fraud via the MaPrimeRénov’ scheme have soared since 2022. ANAH found that in 2024, one in 10 applications received was fraudulent, and represented a company (typically
companies, but could be an individual) applying for aid to help with a non-existent renovation. Similarly, the agency states that since the end of 2022, fraudulent cases appear to have
skyrocketed, including a rise in identity theft in which fictitious applications based on real identities are sent, in a bid to receive aid money for projects that do not exist. This can
also prevent the real people from receiving genuine aid in future. Yet, new artificial intelligence-assisted tools and improved data sharing between agencies and fraud prevention services
have enabled ANAH to detect more fraudulent cases and save hundreds of millions in funding. It also worked with a data scientist to better train the AI to detect more ‘atypicalities’. “By
2024, we had detected 60,500 suspicious cases,” said Tarik Bounit, head of anti-fraud at Anah, to FranceInter. “We confirmed 67% of the [flagged] fraud cases.” Similarly, in 2024, ANAH
received 2,300 tip-offs from people who suspected a fraudulent application. Once the AI tool has detected a possible fraud case, it is flagged, and anti-fraud officials step in to check and
verify the claim. This may include a further request for information from the claimant, the sending of identity verification letters, and on-site checks to verify the reality and compliance
of the work. ‘ESSENTIAL POLICY’ THAT MORE PEOPLE COULD USE Martin Lagane, ANAH spokesperson has said that despite the rising fraud, and the agency’s inability to check every single file
(even with the help of AI), the MaPrimeRénov scheme is still “an essential public policy…and must not be blocked”. In 2024, ANAH paid out more than €3 billion as part of the scheme, but said
that many more people could be genuinely benefitting from the plan, which aims to help homeowners make their properties much more energy-efficient, to save resources and cut bills. Read
also: What is France Rénov’ aid scheme – can I use it to renovate my house? Read more: MaPrimeRenov: How to claim grant for energy upgrades in French home ANAH announced that it was aiming
to enable “700 000 homes to be renovated in 2024, including 200,000 major renovations”. However, only 340,800 homes were renovated in total last year through the scheme, of which 91,374 were
major renovations, it said. Yet, it admitted that these plans can still be expensive, even after the receipt of MaPrimeRénov funding. ANAH said that the average cost of the renovation works
was €55,000, of which nearly €20,000 was typically still payable by the homeowners after financial aid had been granted. AI ASSISTANCE ANAH is not the only government agency to use
AI-assisted tools to combat fraud. Tax authorities have also been using the technology to track undeclared swimming pools, buildings, and Airbnb-style rentals. Read more: French property tax
fraud: what is targeted other than 'secret’ swimming pools? Read also: Tax authorities discover 120,000 undeclared swimming pools in France Similarly, early this year, the CNIL
(France’s data privacy watchdog) granted tax authorities permission to create their own social media accounts to enable them to look through and analyse all publicly-available information on
users’ Facebook, TikTok, Instagram and/or LinkedIn pages, in a bid to crack down on fraud.
Trending News
Emily maitlis stalker jailed after causing decades of 'misery'Edward Vines, 49, was given the prison sentence after breaching the restraining order for a 12th time. The defendant sen...
‘house of the dragon’ in chaos: secret wedding, deaths and dragon claiming explainedEXPLORE MORE This week’s episode of “Game of Thrones” spinoff series “House of the Dragon,” features child violence, a f...
Early glance: machinery companiesShares of some top machinery companies are down at 10 a.m.: Caterpillar fell $.21 or .3 percent, to $82.23. Deere fell $...
Trump in space | The WeekSIGN UP FOR THE WEEK'S FREE NEWSLETTERS From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the be...
Dwp under fire after spending £500,000 on pip and universal credit shake-upTHE DWP HAS BEEN BLASTED AFTER NEW FIGURES SHOWED IT BLEW HALF A MILLION POUNDS DEFENDING DISABILITY BENEFIT CUTS. 07:37...
Latests News
Ai finds ‘soaring’ cases of fraud in french home renovation applicationsMORE THAN 40,000 CASES WERE DETECTED IN 2024, THE HOUSING AGENCY STATES Authorities in France used artificial intelligen...
Huge ea fc 25 fut champions update makes qualifying easier than ever beforeEA SPORTS HAS GIVEN FUT CHAMPIONS A HUGE REFRESH THAT SHOULD SEE MORE PLAYERS QUALIFY FOR THE FINALS IN THE COMING WEEKS...
Spot yourself in 21 photos from bbc radio 1 big weekend on fridayBBC Radio 1's Big Weekend festival is finally here - and the festival was in full swing from the moment gates opene...
Machine learning projects with source code in python — easy projects, intermediate projects, and…In today’s blog, we will see some very interesting MACHINE LEARNING PROJECTS WITH SOURCE CODE IN PYTHON language. This l...
Handling a job buyout; national park wildflower bloomsMemorial Day Sale! Join AARP for just $11 per year with a 5-year membership Join now and get a FREE gift. Expires 6/4 G...