On Wed, Jan 05, 2005 at 02:43:00PM -0300, Mads Rasmussen wrote:
Here in Brazil it's common to ask for a new pin for every transaction
Ditto in Germany, when PIN/TAN method is used. There's also HBCI-based banking,
which
either uses keys living in filesystems, or smartcards -- this one doesn't
Bill Stewart wrote:
Yup. It's the little keychain frob that gives you a string of numbers,
updated every 30 seconds or so, which stays roughly in sync with a server,
so you can use them as one-time passwords
instead of storing a password that's good for a long term.
So if the phisher cons you
On Tue, Jan 04, 2005 at 03:24:56PM -0500, Trei, Peter wrote:
R.A. Hettinga wrote:
Okay. So AOL and Banks are *selling* RSA keys???
Could someone explain this to me?
No. Really. I'm serious...
Cheers,
RAH
The slashdot article title is really, really misleading.
In
R.A. Hettinga wrote:
Okay. So AOL and Banks are *selling* RSA keys???
Could someone explain this to me?
At 12:24 PM 1/4/2005, Trei, Peter wrote:
The slashdot article title is really, really misleading.
In both cases, this is SecurID.
Yup. It's the little keychain frob that gives you a string
R.A. Hettinga wrote:
Okay. So AOL and Banks are *selling* RSA keys???
Could someone explain this to me?
No. Really. I'm serious...
Cheers,
RAH
The slashdot article title is really, really misleading.
In both cases, this is SecurID.
Peter