By Paul NortonPosted Monday 23rd April 2007 10:27 GMT
Hopefully this means that we'll be able to use the system from any operating system. If it was a usb plug-in module with only windows drivers available, I'd be trying to avoid it for as long as possible because I'd rather use internet banking from my linux PC than from the family windows PC even with a PINsentry.
By Anonymous CowardPosted Monday 23rd April 2007 12:23 GMT
Lets think now. You have to use the PINsentry twice. Tricky one that eh? How could a phisher possibly encourage a victim to use the device twice?
Its a good job they'd never think of a bogus "login failed" message implying that the pin had been entered incorrectly or that the session had timed out and you had to login again.
By Casper DikPosted Monday 23rd April 2007 12:57 GMT
I'd like to correct the misconception about the ABN AMRO two factor authentication; the ABN two factor authentication is required at login and
when finally submitting the batch of transactions you have created.
The man in the middle attack worked by piggybacking a rogue transaction as part of the final submission. The bank now suggests to always verify your balance after submitting the transactions; not that a smart MITM could not subvert that check.
When rogue software on your computer interferes with your webbrowser,
the game is basically over except in those cases were there is an additional out of band message, e.g., an SMS detailing all submitted transactions is sent as part of the verification process.
Comments on: Barclays' chip and PIN readers will work for other banks
Easy way to get two auth codes #
By Colin Miller Posted Monday 23rd April 2007 10:22 GMT
platform independence? #
By Paul Norton Posted Monday 23rd April 2007 10:27 GMT
Gone phishing? #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Monday 23rd April 2007 12:23 GMT
ABN AMRO two factor authentication #
By Casper Dik Posted Monday 23rd April 2007 12:57 GMT