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Encyclopedia > Electronic banking

Online banking (Internet banking) is a term used for performing transactions, payments etc. over the internet through a bank's secure website. This can be very useful, especially for banking outside bank hours (which tend to be very short) and banking from anywhere where internet access is available. In most cases a web browser such as Internet Explorer or Mozilla Firefox is utilised and any normal internet connection is suitable. No special software or hardware is usually needed.


Protection through a single password, as is the case in most secure internet shopping sites, is not considered secure enough for personal online banking applications. Online banking user interfaces are secure sites (generally employing the https protocol) and traffic of all information - including the password - is encrypted, making it next to impossible for a third party to obtain or modify information after it is sent. However, encryption alone does not rule out the possibility of hackers gaining access to a vulnerable home PCs and intercepting the password as it is typed in. There is also the danger of password cracking and physical theft of passwords written down by careless users.


Online banking services therefore impose a second layer of security. Strategies vary, but a common method is the use of transaction numbers, or TANs, which are essentially single use passwords. Another strategy is the use of two passwords, only random parts of which are entered at the start of every online banking session. This is however slightly less secure than the TAN alternative and more inconvenient for the user. A third popular option is providing customers with chip card readers capable of generating single use passwords unique to the customer's chip card. Another option is using digital certificates, which digitally sign or authenticate the transactions, by linking them to the physical device (e.g. computer, mobile phone, etc).


Many customers avoid online banking as they (perhaps wrongly) perceive it as being too vulnerable to fraud. The security measures employed by most banks are never 100% safe, but in practice the number of fraud victims due to online banking is very small. Indeed, conventional banking practices may be more prone to abuse by fraudsters than online banking. Credit card fraud, signature forgery and identity theft are far more widespread "offline" crimes than malicious hacking. Online banking is however less forgiving of human error and it can be more insecure if users are careless, gullible or computer illiterate. An increasingly popular criminal practice to gain access to a user's finances is phishing, whereby the user is in some way persuaded to hand over their password(s) to the fraudster.


The number of customers who choose online banking as the preferred method of dealing with their finances is however growing rapidly due to the clear improvement in convenience it offers, including such features as electronic bill payment. There are also more and more banks that operate exclusively online.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Guidance on Electronic Banking (1982 words)
It is not right to move to electronic banking just because it seems fashionable or because the charity’s bank wants it to change (the motive for this might be to help the bank to reduce its own costs, rather than to provide a better service for the charity).
The reason why the banks seek an indemnity is because the risks of misuse of the account are greater in the case of electronic banking than in the case of conventional banking.
In electronic banking arrangements, the effect of the indemnity would be that the bank would only have to make good a loss caused by an unauthorised instruction if the trustees could show that the bank had been negligent.
Electronic Banking (537 words)
Electronic Banking is a generic title that has been used by banks and their corporate customers for some twenty years.
Being electronic, there is always the downside of the system 'going down', which may be a problem at your end of the link, or sometimes, at the bank's.
As the incumbent bank had serviced the business for 40 years, they really sharpened their pencil and the principal was very pleased with the result.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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