[Home]
[Full version]
Probing Question: Is it safe to pay my bills over the Internet?
Jan 19 ,Technology
Managing your money is no easy task. While television commercials make it look easy to do all your banking online in just five minutes, on the next channel, insurance companies warn of crooks that will steal your identity and your money. What’s the deal? Is it safe to pay your bills online?
No, not yet, said John M. Jordan, executive director of the eBusiness Research Center at Penn State's Smeal College of Business. "There are lots of ways it can go wrong," said Jordan, who does not use the Internet to pay his bills or do his banking. Thieves are proficient at outsmarting the technology banks use to provide online access to your accounts. Online crime is a multi-billion dollar global business.
"You hop, they take two hops. You hop again, they take two more," said Jordan. "So far the bad guys are ahead."
A few ways crooks can get your account information and use it to steal your money include:
-- The "man in the middle" scam, in which thieves use a fake Web page that looks identical to your bank's Web site to intercept information you think you are giving to your bank.
-- "Key logging" software -- installed onto your computer without your knowledge -- that records every keystroke made on a machine.
-- Fake e-mails carefully crafted to look as if your own financial institution is requesting your personal information. Called "phishing," this scam stole about $929 million from 1.2 million U.S. consumers from May 2004 to May 2005, according to Gartner, a technology research company in Stamford, Conn.
In addition to having your money stolen, other dangers of online banking include identity theft, damage to your credit rating and the mountain of paperwork involved in straightening out a mess.
"Every time (banks) make online bill-paying easier to use, (they) may be making it easier to break into," said Jordan.
Behind the scenes, banks are scrambling to build security into their systems so that nobody but you can touch your money.
The root of the problem, said Jordan, has to do with authentication, i.e., how banks verify a consumer's identity. In the online arena, banks use only one way to authenticate identity, instead of the two ways used in every other transaction arena.
People prove their identity in three basic ways, he explained: with something they know, such as a password or PIN number; something they have, such as an ATM card; or something they are, such as a fingerprint or photo ID.
Most transactions, said Jordan, involve two of these methods. To take money out of an ATM machine, you provide the bankcard and a PIN number. But online banking uses only one way to verify identity.
"Banks are trying to figure out a second factor of authentication," said Jordan. They have to do it soon, since the federal government wants to see greater security in electronic banking by the end of 2006.
In mid-October, the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council issued new guidance to banks, declaring that the single-factor method of verifying identity for online banking falls short and urging them to better protect consumers' money and identities. The council's members include the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.
Banks can offer further security in many different ways, said Jordan. They may use a "shared secret" method, in which customers send their bank a picture of their dog, then are asked to identify their dog from a canine lineup whenver they want account access. Or banks may provide battery-operated identification cards that automatically issue a new, unique pass-code to their online banking website every 30 to 60 seconds.
Or, you may soon have to use your fingerprint to log in to your account. A fingerprint-reader device generates a unique multi-digit secure number that can't be hacked, said Jordan.
Banks must find solutions because a lack of consumer trust threatens online banking and e-commerce itself, said Jordan. "If you lose trust in the instrument of money, then there is no money because money is a trust system."
Source: Penn State (By Lisa Duchene)
Related stories:
Wireless World: Free cell phones for all?
Broadcast television has always been free for consumers -- courtesy of advertising sponsors, ranging from the makers of Alka-Seltzer to the purveyors of Viagra and Propecia. Now that mobile phones are as integral to American culture as television, isn't it about time to think about making them similarly "free" of cost for consumers too? That's the question that advertising -- mobile-phone company -- executives are debating now, experts are telling United Press International's Wireless World.
New giant clam species offers window into human past
Researchers report the discovery of the first new living species of giant clam in two decades, according to a report to be published online on August 28th in
Current Biology, a Cell Press publication. While fossil evidence reveals that the new species, called
Tridacna costata, once accounted for more than 80 percent of giant clams in the Red Sea, it now represents less than one percent of giant clams living there.
Sellers squawk as eBay evolves to combat rivals
Flocks of eBay sellers were squawking as the pioneering online auction website continued "bold changes" aimed at wrenching market share from Internet retail giant Amazon.
When charities ask for time, people give more money
According to new research in the
Journal of Consumer Research, simply asking people a question about whether they're willing to volunteer their time leads to increases in donations of both time and money.
Chips are down as Manchester makes protein scanning breakthrough
Scientists at The University of Manchester have developed a new and fast method for making biological 'chips' – technology that could lead to quick testing for serious diseases, fast detection of MRSA infections and rapid discovery of new drugs.
Some eBay sellers frustrated with rule changes
(AP) -- Some people who sell things on eBay are fed up with new rules the company has been imposing in hopes of making the auction site more attractive to online shoppers. Now even more changes are coming in the next few weeks, but this time eBay Inc. hopes it can cool tempers.
New approach needed to help street-based sex workers
Integrated multi-agency work will be needed to address the poor physical and mental health experienced by street-based sex workers (SSWs), according to recent research including a new study by .
New magazine-sharing site may violate copyrights
(AP) -- The magazine industry, already facing a decline in newsstand sales and falling ad revenue, is being besieged by a new foe: digital piracy.
[Home]
[Full version]