If they haven't noticed already, customers of Bank of America's online banking services will start getting prompted to enter what the financial institution is referring to as "sitekey" information.
The Anti-Phishing Working Group (APWG) continues to publish its regular reports on phishing, the practice of sending potential victims misleading e-mail messages directing them to fraudulent Web sites ...
In my last column, I described a novel approach to Web site authentication involving a user-selected picture and label; one technique using this approach is the SiteKey currently being used by Bank of ...
The authentication technology used by Sitekey, Bank of America's online customer service system, is flawed and could make the bank vulnerable to denial-of-service attacks, a vendor said yesterday in a ...
Stung by recent high-profile security breaches, Bank of America Corp. is rolling out a new online banking security system aimed at making it harder for cyberthieves to crack customer accounts.
This content is provided by an external author without editing by Finextra. It expresses the views and opinions of the author. Bank of America leads the industry with the SiteKey service, which ...
A bank that guarantees its online users safety and security has direct evidence that its Web-based banking system may not be 100 percent bullet-proof. Should that bank tell its customers? And if it ...
Nearly 20 million Bank of America users now see a corny picture when they log in to their online banking service: violins, a bridge with swans underneath, chocolate, a tea kettle or mountain vistas, ...
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