Device Intelligence
Your first line of
defense against fraud
touchpoint—before fraud costs you time, trust, or money.

Stop fraud
before it starts
wasted verification
early on
with advanced signals
in the background



Streamline sign-ups by distinguishing trusted users
from suspicious ones—no added friction for good users.
Prevent account takeovers with smart device
fingerprinting that spots anomalies instantly.
Detect and block fraudulent activity by analyzing device behavior
during any user action, such as transactions, withdrawals, or profile changes.

Advanced threat detection
for any industry
Seamless integration with your existing stack
Device Intelligence is fully integrated into the Sumsub platform and powered by Fingerprint. Customize your risk rules in minutes with our no-code engine and start seeing value instantly.

Don’t take our word for it.
Here’s what our clients have to say
Reach out to see Device
Intelligence in action
See what you can get out of the most advanced fraud and risk assessment tool on the market. Reach out to us today.
FAQ
How is Device Intelligence different from other anti-fraud tools?
Most tools react after fraud happens. Device Intelligence stops it early by analyzing device fingerprints, behavior patterns, and network signals in real time—detecting risk before onboarding, withdrawals, or account changes.
What kind of fraud does Device Intelligence help prevent?
It helps stop bots, multi-accounting, fake signups, promotional bonus abuse, account takeovers, location spoofing, trial fraud, chargeback fraud, data crawling, metrics inflation, trust manipulation, and risky password resets—at any stage of the user journey.
What is an IP fraud check?
An IP fraud check assesses whether a user’s IP address shows signs of risk—such as being linked to VPNs, proxies, known fraud rings, or unusual geographies. It’s a key early signal in determining user trustworthiness
Which software is used for fingerprint recognition?
Device Intelligence uses Fingerprint.com’s technology to create unique browser and device fingerprints. These are used to detect risky setups like virtual machines, incognito mode, or cloned apps—without relying on cookies.
Is device fingerprinting legal?
Yes—when used with proper consent and privacy compliance. Device fingerprinting is a widely accepted method for preventing fraud, especially when it’s transparent, limited in scope, and part of a broader security strategy.