UK banks in talks to tighten security

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UK high street banks may soon tighten their security in a bid to protect customers from identity theft.

Security company RSA revealed on Thursday that it has been in discussions with all of the major UK banks about providing them with better security for their customers. Although UK banks have thus far been slow to take up increased security measures, RSA said they are now close to acting on identity theft.

"We are in conversations with all of them," said Tim Pickard, marketing director at RSA Security, speaking at CeBIT in Hannover. "It's an issue that's on all their minds. I expect you will see them move this year."

Last year Howard Schmidt, former cybersecurity advisor to the White House and chief security officer for eBay, called on all online businesses to implement stronger authentication for their customers' security. Some banks in Norway are already taking the issue seriously by generating one-time tokens to authenticate users.

As yet it is unclear how much money has been stolen through Internet identity theft but next month the Association for Payment and Clearing Services is set to release a report giving more details on the extend of the problem.

Pickard added that phishing attacks are likely to rise dramatically later this year, because fraudsters in China are creating huge databases of email addresses and identities.

"China and south Asia is likely to come online soon with phishing scams. They [phishers] are building databases to launch phishing attacks," said Pickard.

For a look at the fun side of CeBIT, check out our CeBIT Digital Living special. Or visit ZDNet UK's CeBIT Toolkit for more enterprise technology stories and pictures from the show floor.

Talkback

UK banks are useless, look how long they have taken to adopt chip & pin, something used abroad now for years. The American bank, Citi Bank, put colour pictures on the front of cards and stores the signature electronically.

Yet my bank, Barclays is just like all the other UK banks and refuses to take such measures. They just don't want to spend the money.

Its so obvious the best way to tackle fraud is to use Biometrics, which is impossible to fake.

via Facebook 10 March, 2005 18:42
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