Showing posts with label Automated teller machine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Automated teller machine. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

FDIC: Hackers Took More Than $120M in Three Months



This is the "type" of news we will continue reading until we stop entering/typing passwords and start authenticating ourselves the same way we authenticate ourselves at an ATM or at the Point of Sale in a retail store.  Swipe your Bank Issued Card and Enter Your Bank Issued PIN. .  Why should the internet be any different?  The web inherently makes people think everything should be software-based. NOT financial transactions.   They MUST be conducted "outside the browser space." It's just the way it is.  Extremely sensitive financial information (either online banking credentials or credit/debit card numbers) have no business being entered/typed.  It makes it readily available to hackers.  Why do you think they call it a "browser?"  Various keylogging/malware and phishing attacks have now risen to the tune of $120 million in the 3rd quarter of 2009.  I have a sneaky suspicion that the Q4 numbers will be higher.  If the online banking credentials or cardholder data was encrypted inside a separate machine there wouldn't be anything to obtain.  It would all be gobblygook protected by Derived Unique Key Per Transaction end-to-end encryption.  It's why we have the only PCI certified PED designed for eCommerce financial transactional use.  Don't you believe it's time for a change?

Robert McMillan, IDG News Service



Online banking fraud involving the electronic transfer of funds has been on the rise since 2007 and rose to over US$120 million in the third quarter of 2009, according to estimates presented Friday at the RSA Conference in San Francisco, by David Nelson, an examination specialist with the FDIC.



The FDIC receives a variety of confidential reports from financial institutions, which allow it to generate the estimates, Nelson said.



Almost all of the incidents reported to the FDIC "related to malware on online banking customers' PCs," he said. Typically a victim is tricked into visiting a malicious Web site or downloading a Trojan horse program that gives hackers access to their banking passwords. Money is then transferred out of the account using the Automated Clearing House (ACH) system that banks use to process payments between institutions.



Even though banks now force customers to use several forms of authentication, hackers are still stealing money. "Online banking customers are getting too reliant on authentication and on practicing layers of controls," Nelson said.


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Monday, March 1, 2010

Is Online Banking's "Perfect Storm" Brewing?

Bank Info Security's Linda McGlasson's take on online banking sounds vaguely familiar.  A perfect storm IS brewing and if  banks want to safely maneuver their way through they will need better security on board.  Our technology eliminates typing, thus the threat posed from phishing. 



Online banking malware recognizes when you visit a financial institution and keystroke logs your online banking credentials.



With our system in place, the online bank server recognizes when you visit and rather than asking the you to type in your credentials, it would instruct you to do the same trusted process to withdraw cash at an ATM. 



Swipe your card and Enter their PIN.  Existing Cards, Existing PINs, Existing Bank Rails.  No Skimmers...No Hidden Cameras.  That's protection.  Even against Trojans.

The Perfect Storm is Brewing

March 1, 2010 - Linda McGlasson




Linda McGlasson


There's a storm brewing on the horizon for the financial services industry, and it may be as devastating as "The Perfect Storm."



I was talking with one of my security forensics contacts, and he related a bit of insight that made me stop and think.




"Why is it," he told me, "that a bank will weigh the scales of risk and consider it better to take $1 million in losses rather than spend $2 million to fix its security and stop the fraud in the first place?" 





The 'perfect storm' is coming, fueled by the public opinion that their banks aren't doing enough to protect them. 



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Friday, September 5, 2008

World ATM Markets


High Growth Forecasted for the World Automated Teller Machines Market - MarketWatch
LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM, Sep 04, 2008 (MARKET WIRE via COMTEX) -- Reportlinker.com
announces that a new market research report related to the Electronics industry is available in its catalogue.

World Automated Teller Machines Market

http://www.reportlinker.com/p092472/World-Automated-Teller-Machines-Market.html

This report analyzes the worldwide markets for Automated Teller Machines in Thousands of Units. The report provides separate comprehensive analytics for the US, Canada, Japan, Europe, Asia-Pacific, Middle East, Africa, and Latin America. Annual forecasts are provided for each region for the period of 2000 through 2015.

The report profiles 42 companies including many key and niche players worldwide such as Chungho ComNet Co., Ltd., Diebold, Inc., Euronet Worldwide, Inc., Fujitsu, Greenlink Technologies, Inc., Hitachi-Omron Terminal Solutions, Corp., NCR Corporation, Tranax Technologies, Inc., Triton Systems, Inc., Verifone Holdings, Inc., and Wincor Nixdorf International GmbH. Market data and analytics are derived from primary and secondary research.

Company profiles are mostly extracted from URL research and reported select online sources.

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