FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Thieves Plunder Online Bank Accounts
Jersey City, NJ , October 01, 2009
- When hackers stole $588,000 from Patco Construction Co. in Maine in
May 2009, Patco's attorneys advised it to sue its bank for not
requiring adequate authentication.
"The case is ongoing," said Abdulhayoglu. "Whoever wins, the lawsuit will still be expensive and time-consuming, and both sides will wish they could have prevented it."
"Unfortunately,
it's difficult to stop a determined thief. But prevention-based
software can often mitigate risk, making the Internet safer for us all."
Malicious software now replaces old-fashioned confidence games, enabling hackers to empty bank accounts with ease.
In
the old days, con artists devised elaborate scams involving dropping
envelopes full of money in front of the unwary, or promoting
undeveloped swampland in Florida. The labor-intensive
one-victim-at-a-time approach is outdated. Today, con artists infect
hundreds or thousands of personal computers with key logging software,
recording every key each Internet user taps. This way they collect
information about bank account numbers and passwords.
Armed
with confidential information, thieves plunder bank accounts at will,
and rapidly, as unsuspecting small businesses and school districts
around the United States are learning to their dismay.
"The cyber criminals have spotted a very high value yet very soft target" said Melih Abdulhayoglu, CEO of Comodo, in a recent video about bilked school districts "They
inject…malicious executables into school districts' systems, and they
take over their bank details and they siphon off money,
"It's a sad, sad, sad day," said Abdulhayoglu, when money from innocent organizations goes "straight into cyber criminals' pockets."
"We don't have to suffer at the hands of cyber criminals…all we need is prevention as the first line of defense."
Such prevention is available both for banking institutions and for their online depositors.
Online
depositors should protect their personal computers from malicious
executable files, otherwise known as malware, by using top-quality
firewall and antivirus software. Such software should prevent software
such as keyloggers from installing itself in a computer.
By
law, one single password is not enough protection for online banking.
To guard against hacker incursions, banks are required to demand more
ID when communicating securely with customers online. The US Federal
Financial Institutions Examination Council (FFIEC) requires that banks
and credit unions only allow customers to access their accounts if they
use at least one other identification factor in addition to the
passwords.
Requiring that the customer enter a
password is a layer of protection called "authentication"- ensuring
that the customer is authentic. In addition, the financial institution
must authenticate again by asking for at least one other piece of
information. The information can be something the customer "is" such as
a fingerprint, or something the customer "has" such as a physical key.