Agentic AI
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Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning
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Finance & Banking
US Faster Payments Council’s Peter Tapling on Automated Agentic AI Commerce
Artificial intelligence agents can trigger transactions customers never intended. With traditional payment rules failing to address bot-driven decisions, financial institutions must rethink how they assess fraud, dispute resolution and transaction monitoring in the age of agentic AI commerce.
See Also: AI Agents Demand Scalable Identity Security Frameworks
Traditional card dispute rules don’t account for the complexities of agentic commerce, through which AI initiates purchases that technically follow authorization procedures but defy user intent, said Peter Tapling, vice chair for the board of directors at the U.S. Faster Payments Council.
“I do think anytime we are talking about AI, people are worried about hallucinations, they are worried about errors on the backend of a payment,” Tapling said. “We are going to have a period of adjustment. Let us say people pick up the phone and call and say, ‘It was not me.’ And the credit card company says, ‘Well, it was done using your card.’ And if somebody says, ‘Well, but I set up an AI agent, I just didn’t want it to do that.’ How do we treat that?”
Tapling said banks will need to monitor transaction behavior closely, as bot-initiated payments likely won’t diverge from a user’s typical patterns. Instead of flagging large outliers, fraud tools may need to assess clusters of smaller purchases and shifts in timing, location or vendor profiles, he said.
In this video interview with Information Security Media Group, Tapling also discussed:
- How bot-driven and app-triggered transactions reshape fraud patterns;
- Ways banks can distinguish between bot behavior and human behavior in real-time payments;
- Guardrails that can prevent AI agents from making unauthorized or erratic purchases.
Tapling leads PTap Advisory LLC, a services firm that helps organizations understand how to use technology to help support their business strategy. He was the founding CEO of Authentify, which introduced out-of-band authentication to financial services.

