Banks to Use 2-factor Authentication by End of 2006
Evil Grinn writes "As reported on Yahoo and elsewhere the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council (FFIEC) has given a deadline of end-of-year 2006 for U.S. banks to implement two factor authentication."
Sounds great, as long as they don't take the opportunity to lock out their actual customers.
Good ideas:
Bad ideas:
Bottom line: These are average people on home PCs, not corporate desktops where they can dictate the hardware/OS config, and anything that takes too much time/effort/skill/cash to install is going to be prohibitive. If banks keep that in mind, this should work. If not, they'll find a sharp drop in use of their online services.
Taking up the extra security is entirely up to the individual and is gradually being introduced to customers, though it costs a reasonable amount of money to actually order a security device.
http://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2005/03/the_ failure_of.html
Also, is this simlar what we have had in sweden for a couble of years for our banking systems? We have a personal badge that we enter a pin and a temporary code to get a new temporary code to be able to authenticate??
------- In the end there are no begining
sure, it's really far from RSA, as my code doesn't change and anyone can easily just photocopy my card. but i thought that it was a creative solution to implement a two factor auth that even dummies would understand, while providing a lower cost to implement.
I'm surprised no one mentioned it yet - bank customers that choose to use (likely have no choice eventually) two factor authentication may be in for a nasty surprise ... I bet, much like Verified by Visa, the onus of proving fraud will be further shifted to the customer - banks will contend that two factor authentication is super-duper secure and any security violation must be solely the customer's fault.
... two factor authentication, as proposed, is faulty from the start ... sure the barrier for fraudsters is a bit higher, but not by much ... a variant of the traditional man in the middle attack is all it takes...
... and even worse, the fraudster may not even have to program a complicated trojan, since many folks already use software (or unknowingly have it installed) that allow for remote access.
... perhaps they have ... if anyone here knows more, please reply - thanks!
Speaking of fault
Keys, etc are no good if the fraudster takes control of the victim's computer itself
Banks are going to love this - sure the key tokens, etc are going to be a hassle for them to distribute, etc, but in the longrun banks will be able to shift more of the risk to the customer unless consumer groups speakup
Ron