Barclays has unveiled plans for a range of anti-fraud measures over the next
12 months to protect online banking customers.
The bank told Computing it will introduce a variety of methods to
authenticate internet users, including card readers and mobile phone
verification.
The aim is to offer different devices depending on customer needs, says
Barclays director of electronic banking Barnaby Davis.
‘Everyone is trying to find a one-solution-fits-all method, but I don’t think
that is how the internet will move,’ he said.
‘We are looking at a split service. There might be a one-time passcode for
smaller payments, but if you move large amounts of money around you may want to
use a card-based solution.’
The plans build on last week’s announcement that Barclays has become the
first UK bank to offer free
anti-virus
software, supplied by
F-Secure, to all 1.6
million active online customers, as well as a text messaging service to alert
customers to suspicious transactions.
The text service, already used by Barclays’ ABSA bank in South Africa, will
notify customers when a third-party payment is set up using their online
account.
The bank plans to extend this service and use it as an anti-phishing
technology, to issue an extra one-time password and notify customers if someone
tries to log in to their internet account.
‘They will know as soon as someone tries to make a payment and can stop them.
We also see the SMS notification service developing to include an element of
authentication,’ said Davis.
Barclays also expects to start issuing a payment card-reading device to
high-use internet customers next year, to authenticate transactions made via the
internet or telephone.
The interoperable card reader developed by banking industry body Apacs aims
to cut card-not-present fraud, which grew by 21 per cent last year, costing UK
banks £183.2m.
‘Early alert systems of any type that notify banking customers are a good
idea,’ said Sandra Quinn, director of corporate communications for Apacs.
‘Over the next 18 months to two years we will see banks offering a variety of
things to further cut fraud.’
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