The
eCenturion
Tribune
Regulatory
News
Banks
Required to Provide "Two Factor" Authentication to Internet
Banking Customers
October
18 , 2005
By BRIAN BERGSTEIN, AP Technology Writer
BOSTON - Federal
regulators will require banks to strengthen security for Internet
customers through authentication that goes beyond mere user names
and passwords, which have become too easy for criminals to exploit.
Bank Web sites
are expected to adopt some form of "two-factor" authentication
by the end of 2006, regulators with the Federal Financial Institutions
Examination Council said in a letter to banks last week.
In two-factor
authentication, customers must confirm their identities not only
through something they know, like a PIN or password, but also
with something they physically have, like a hardware token with
numeric access codes that change every minute.
Other types
of two-factor authentication include costlier hardware involving
biometrics or "smart" cards that would be inserted into
designated readers on a user's computer.
Banks might
also issue one-time passwords on scratch-off cards or require
"secret questions" about a customer's account, such
as the amount of the last deposit or mortgage payment.
The council
also suggested that banks explore technology that can estimate
a Web user's physical location and compare it to the address on
file.
The most common
way of stealing consumers' personal identity data and financial
account credentials online, known as phishing, typically involves
sending e-mails that direct unwitting users to phony Web sites.
Data harvested at such sites is then used fraudulently.
The Anti-Phishing
Working group, an industry association, reported 13,776 unique
types of phishing attacks in August.
While some
financial institutions have given their customers electronic password
tokens, those have tended to be optional. Other banks have instituted
password entry through mouse clicks instead of typing, a protection
against keystroke-snooping programs.
But in general,
the industry can do more to stop account fraud and identity theft,
according to the financial institutions council - which includes
the Federal Reserve; the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.; the
U.S. Comptroller; the Office of Thrift Supervision and the National
Credit Union Administration.
"The
agencies consider single-factor authentication, as the only control
mechanism, to be inadequate for high-risk transactions involving
access to customer information or the movement of information
to other parties," the council wrote. "Account fraud
and identity theft are frequently the result of single-factor
... authentication exploitation."
FDIC spokesman
David Barr said the rules will serve as standards that will be
checked when banks' practices are audited.
Although the
requirements apply just to financial services companies, the policy
could stimulate wider use of two-factor authentication by other
merchants that are willing to "federate" their Web sites
with banks, said Michael Aisenberg, director of government relations
for Internet services provider VeriSign Inc.
VeriSign is
a member of the Liberty Alliance, a group that is working to develop
standards for federated authentication.
In a federated
system, a two-factor login at one site would be recognized by
another, so a travel agency associated with your bank would automatically
grant you access if you came straight from the financial institution's
Web site.
At the very
least, Aisenberg said, "The securities industry is going
to have to go along and other regulated sectors will no doubt
follow along as well."