Online banking/ E-banking
Online banking is an electronic payment system that enables customers of a financial institution to conduct financial transactions on a website operated by the institution, such as a retail bank, virtual bank, credit union or building society. Online banking is also referred as internet banking, e-banking, virtual banking and by other terms.
To access a financial institution's online banking facility, a customer with Internet access would need to register with the institution for the service, and set up a password and other credentials for customer verification. The credentials for online banking is normally not the same as for telephone banking. Financial institutions now routinely allocate customers numbers, whether or not customers have indicated an intention to access their online banking facility. Customers' numbers are normally not the same as account numbers, because a number of customer accounts can be linked to the one customer number. The customer number can be linked to any account that the customer controls, such as cheque, savings, loan, credit card and other accounts.
To access online banking, a customer visits the financial institution's secure website, and enters the online banking facility using the customer number and credentials previously setup. Online banking services usually include viewing and downloading balances and statements, and may include the ability to initiate payments, transfers and other transactions, as well as interacting with the bank in other ways.
Features
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Online banking facilities offered by various financial institutions have many features and capabilities in common, but also have some that are application specific.
The common features fall broadly into several categories:
A bank customer can perform non-transnational tasks through online banking, including -
Viewing account balances
Viewing recent transactions
Downloading bank statements, for example in PDF format
Viewing images of paid cheques
Ordering cheque books
Download periodic account statements
Downloading applications for M-banking, E-banking etc.
Bank customers can transact banking tasks through online banking, including -
Funds transfers between the customer's linked accounts
Paying third parties, including bill payments (see, e.g., BPAY) and third party fund transfers (see, e.g., FAST)
Investment purchase or sale
Loan applications and transactions, such as repayments of enrollments
Credit card applications
Register utility billers and make bill payments
Financial institution administration
Management of multiple users having varying levels of authority
Transaction approval process
Some financial institutions offer unique Internet banking services, for example:
Personal financial management support, such as importing data into personal accounting software. Some online banking platforms support account aggregation to allow the customers to monitor all of their accounts in one place whether they are with their main bank or with other institutions.
History
The precursor for the modern home online banking services were the distance banking services over electronic media from the early 1980s. The term 'Online' became popular in the late '80s and referred to the use of a terminal, keyboard and TV (or monitor) to access the banking system using a phone line. 'Home banking' can also refer to the use of a numeric keypad to send tones down a phone line with instructions to the bank. Online services started in New York in 1981 when four of the city's major banks (Citibank, Chase Manhattan, Chemical and Manufacturers Hanover) offered home banking services. Using the videotex system. Because of the commercial failure of videotex these banking services never became popular except in France where the use of videotex (Minitel) was subsidized by the telecom provider and the UK, where the Prestel system was used. For more information about the latter see Online banking in the U.K.
When the clicks-and-bricks euphoria hit in the late 1990s, many banks began to view Web-based banking as a strategic imperative. The attraction of banks to online banking are fairly obvious: diminished transaction costs, easier integration of services, interactive marketing capabilities, and other benefits that boost customer lists and profit margins. Additionally, Web banking services allow institutions to bundle more services into single packages, thereby luring customers and minimizing overhead.
A mergers-and-acquisitions wave swept the financial industries in the mid-and late 1998s, greatly expanding banks' customer bases. Following this, banks looked to the Web as a way of maintaining their customers and building loyalty. A number of different factors are causing bankers to shift more of their business to the virtual realm.
While financial institutions took steps to implement e-banking services in the mid-1990s, many consumers were hesitant to conduct monetary transactions over the web. It took widespread adoption of electronic commerce, based on trailblazing companies such as America Online, Amazon.com and eBay, to make the idea of paying for items online widespread. By 2000, 80 percent of U.S. banks offered e-banking. Customer use grew slowly. At Bank of America, for example, it took 10 years to acquire 2 million e-banking customers. However, a significant cultural change took place after the Y2K scare ended. In 2001, Bank of America became the first bank to top 3 million online banking customers, more than 20 percent of its customer base. In comparison, larger national institutions, such as Citigroup claimed 2.2 million online relationships globally, while J.P. Morgan Chase estimated it had more than 750,000 online banking customers. Wells Fargo had 2.5 million online banking customers, including small businesses. Online customers proved more loyal and profitable than regular customers. In October 2001, Bank of America customers executed a record 3.1 million electronic bill payments, totaling more than $1 billion. In 2009, a report by Gartner Group estimated that 47 percent of U.S. adults and 30 percent in the United Kingdom bank online.
Today, many banks are internet only banks. Unlike their predecessors, these internet only banks do not maintain brick and mortar bank branches. Instead, they typically differentiate themselves by offering better interest rates and more extensive online banking features.
First online banking services in the United States
According to "Banking and Finance on the Internet," edited by Mary J. Cronin, online banking was first introduced in the early 1980s in New York. Four major banks Citibank, Chase Manhattan, Chemical and Manufacturers Hanover—offered home banking services. Chemical introduced its Pronto services for individuals and small businesses in 1983. It allowed individual and small-business clients to maintain electronic checkbook registers, see account balances, and transfer funds between checking and savings accounts. Pronto failed to attract enough customers to break even and was abandoned in 1989. Other banks had a similar experience.
Online banking in the U.K.
Almost simultaneously with the United States, online banking arrived in the United Kingdom. The UK's first home online banking services known as Home link was set up by Bank of Scotland for customers of the Nottingham Building Society (NBS) in 1983. The system used was based on the UK's Prestle view link system and used a computer, such as the BBC Micro, or keyboard (Tan data Td1400) connected to the telephone system and television set. The system allowed on-line viewing of statements, bank transfers and bill payments. In order to make bank transfers and bill payments, a written instruction giving details of the intended recipient had to be sent to the NBS who set the details up on the Home link system. Typical recipients were gas, electricity and telephone companies and accounts with other banks. Details of payments to be made were input into the NBS system by the account holder via Prestel. A cheque was then sent by NBS to the payee and an advice giving details of the payment was sent to the account holder. BACS was later used to transfer the payment directly.
Stanford Federal Credit Union was the first financial institution to offer online internet banking services to all of its members in October 1994.
Banks and the World Wide Web
In the 1990s, banks realized that the rising popularity of the World Wide Web gave them an added opportunity to advertise their services. Initially, they used the Web as another brochure, without interaction with the customer. Early sites featured pictures of the bank's officers or buildings, and provided customers with maps of branches and ATM locations, phone numbers to call for further information and simple listings of products.
Interactive banking on the Web
Wells Fargo was the first U.S. bank to add account services to its website, in 1995. Other banks quickly followed suit. That same year Presidential became the first bank in the United States to open bank accounts over the Internet. According to research by Online Banking Report, by the end of 1999, less than 0.4% of households in the U.S. were using online banking. At the beginning of 2004, some 33 million U.S. households (31% of the market) were using one form or another of online banking. Five years later, 47% of Americans were banking online, according to a survey by Gartner Group. Meanwhile, in the UK e-banking grew its reach from 63% to 70% of Internet users between 2011 and 2012.
Since its inception, online banking in the US has been federally governed by the Electronic Funds Transfer Act of 1978.
Advantages
There are some advantages on using e-banking both for banks and customers:
Permanent access to the bank
Lower transaction costs / general cost reductions
Access anywhere
Security
Five security token devices for online banking.
Security of a customer's financial information is very important, without which online banking could not operate. Similarly the reputational risks to the banks themselves are important. Financial institutions have set up various security processes to reduce the risk of unauthorized online access to a customer's records, but there is no consistency to the various approaches adopted.
Though single password authentication is still in use, it by itself is not considered secure enough for online banking in some countries. Basically there are two different security methods in use for online banking:
The PIN/TAN system where the PIN represents a password, used for the login and TANs representing one-time passwords to authenticate transactions. TANs can be distributed in different ways; the most popular one is to send a list of TANs to the online banking user by postal letter. Another way of using TANs is to generate them by need using a security token. These token generated TANs depend on the time and a unique secret, stored in the security token (two-factor authentication or 2FA).
More advanced TAN generators (chip TAN) also include the transaction data into the TAN generation process after displaying it on their own screen to allow the user to discover man-in-the-middle attacks carried out by Trojans trying to secretly manipulate the transaction data in the background of the PC.
Another way to provide TANs to an online banking user is to send the TAN of the current bank transaction to the user's (GSM) mobile phone via SMS. The SMS text usually quotes the transaction amount and details; the TAN is only valid for a short period of time. Especially in Germany, Austria and the Netherlands many banks have adopted this "SMS TAN" service.
Signature based online banking where all transactions are signed and encrypted digitally. The Keys for the signature generation and encryption can be stored on smart-cards or any memory medium, depending on the concrete implementation (see, e.g., the Spanish ID card DNI electronic.
Attacks
Attacks on online banking used today are based on deceiving the user to steal login data and valid TANs. Two well known examples for those attacks are phishing and pharming. Cross-site scripting and key logger/Trojan horses can also be used to steal login information.
A method to attack signature based online banking methods is to manipulate the used software in a way, that correct transactions are shown on the screen and faked transactions are signed in the background.
A 2008 U.S. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Technology Incident Report, compiled from suspicious activity reports banks file quarterly, lists 536 cases of computer intrusion, with an average loss per incident of $30,000. That adds up to a nearly $16-million loss in the second quarter of 2007. Computer intrusions increased by 150 percent between the first quarter of 2007 and the second. In 80 percent of the cases, the source of the intrusion is unknown but it occurred during online banking, the report states.
Another kind of attack is the so-called man-in-the-browser attack, a variation of the man-in-the-middle attack where a Trojan horse permits a remote attacker to secretly modify the destination account number and also the amount in the web browser.
As a reaction to advanced security processes allowing the user to cross check the transaction data on a secure device there are also combined attacks using malware and social engineering to persuade the user himself to transfer money to the fraudsters on the ground of false claims (like the claim the bank would require a "test transfer" or the claim a company had falsely transferred money to the user's account and he should "send it back"). Users should therefore never perform bank transfers they have not initiated themselves.
Countermeasures
There exist several countermeasures which try to avoid attacks. Digital certificates are used against phishing and pharming, in signature based online banking variants (HBCI/FinTS) the use of "Secoder" card readers is a measurement to uncover software side manipulations of the transaction data. To protect their systems against Trojan horses, users should use virus scanners and be careful with downloaded software or e-mail attachments. In 2001, the U.S. Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council issued guidance for multifactor authentication (MFA) and then required to be in place by the end of 2006.
In 2012, the European Union Agency for Network and Information Security advised all banks to consider the PC systems of their users being infected by malware by default and therefore use security processes where the user can cross check the transaction data against manipulations like for example (provided the security of the mobile phone holds up) SMS TAN where the transaction data is send along with the TAN number or standalone smartcard readers with an own screen including the transaction data into the TAN generation process while displaying it beforehand to the user (see chip TAN) to counter man-in-the-middle attacks.
E-BANKING
Electronic banking, also known as electronic funds transfer (EFT), Is simply the use of electronic means to transfer funds directly. From one account to another, rather than by cheque or cash.
You can use electronic funds transfer to:
•Have your paycheck deposited directly into your bank or credit union checking account.
•Withdraw money from your checking account from an ATM machine with a personal identification number (PIN), at your convenience, day or night.
•Instruct your bank or credit union to automatically pay certain monthly bills from your account, such as your auto loan or your mortgage payment.
•Have the bank or credit union transfer funds each month from your checking account to your mutual fund account.
•Have your government social security benefits check or your tax refund deposited directly into your checking account.
•Buy groceries, gasoline and other purchases at the point-of- sale, using a check card rather than cash, credit or a personal check.
•Use a smart card with a prepaid amount of money Embedded in it for use instead of cash at a pay phone, Expressway road toll, or on college campuses at the library's Photocopy machine or bookstores. •Use your computer and personal finance software to Coordinate your total personal financial management process, Integrating data and activities related to your income, spending, Saving, investing, record keeping, bill-paying and taxes, along with basic financial analysis and decision making.
VARIOUS FORMS OF E-BANKING:
Internet Banking
Lets you handle many banking transactions via
your personal computer. For instance, you may use your computer
to view your account balance, request transfers between
accounts, and pay bills electronically.
Internet banking system and method in which a personal
computer is connected by a network service provider directly to a
host computer system of a bank such that customer service
requests can be processed automatically without need for
intervention by customer service representatives. The system is
capable of distinguishing between those customer service
requests which are capable of automated fulfillment and those
requests which require handling by a customer service
representative. The system is integrated with the host computer
system of the bank so that the remote banking customer can
access other automated services of the bank. The method of the
invention includes the steps of inputting a customer banking
request from among a menu of banking requests at a remote
personnel computer; transmitting the banking requests to a host
computer over a network; receiving the request at the host
computer; identifying the type of customer banking request
received; automatic logging of the service request, comparing the
received request to a stored table of request types, each of the
request types having an attribute to indicate whether the request
E-BANKING
Type is capable of being fulfilled by a customer service
representative or by an automated system; and, depending upon
the attribute, directing the request either to a queue for handling by
a customer service representative or to a queue for processing by
an automated system.
AUTOMATED TELLER MACHINES (ATM)
An unattended electronic machine in a public place, connected to
a data system and related equipment and activated by a bank
customer to obtain cash withdrawals and other banking services also called
Automatic Teller Machine (ATM)
is an electronic computerized telecommunications device that allows a financial institution's customers to directly use a secure method of communication to access their bank accounts, order or make cash withdrawals (or cash advances using a credit card) and check their account balances without the need for a human bank teller (or cashier in the UK). Many ATMs also allow People to deposit cash or cheques, transfer money between their bank accounts, top up their mobile phones' pre-paid accounts or even buy postage stamps. On most modern ATMs, the customer identifies hi or herself by inserting a plastic card with a magnetic stripe or a plastic smartcard with a chip, that contains his or her account number.
TELE BANKING:
Undertaking a host of banking related services including financial
transactions from the convenience of customers chosen place
anywhere across the GLOBE and any time of date and night has
now been made possible by introducing on-line Telebanking
services. By dialing the given Telebanking number through a
landline or a mobile from anywhere, the customer can access his
account and by following the user-friendly menu, entire banking
can be done through Interactive Voice Response (IVR) system.
With sufficient numbers of hunting lines made available, customer
call will hardly fail. The system is bi-lingual and has following
Facilities offered
•Automatic balance voice out for the default account.
•Balance inquiry and transaction inquiry in all
•Inquiry of all term deposit account
•Statement of account by Fax, e-mail or ordinary mail.
•Cheque book request
•Stop payment which is on-line and instantaneous
•Transfer of funds with CBS which is automatic and
instantaneous
•Utility Bill Payments
•Renewal of term deposit which is automatic and instantaneous
•Voice out of last five transactions.
SMART CARD:
A smart card usually contains an embedded 8-bit microprocessor
(a kind of computer chip). The microprocessor is under a contact
pad on one side of the card. Think of the microprocessor as
replacing the usual magnetic stripe present on a credit card or
debit card.
The microprocessor on the smart card is there for security. The
host computer and card reader actually "talk" to the microprocessor.
The microprocessor enforces access to the data
on the card.
The chips in these cards are capable of many kinds of
transactions. For example, a person could make purchases from
their credit account, debit account or from a stored account value
that's reload able. The enhanced memory and processing capacity
of the smart card is many times that of traditional magnetic-stripe
cards and can accommodate several different applications on a
single card. It can also hold identification information, which
means no more shuffling through cards in the wallet to find the
right one the Smart Card will be the only one needed.
Smart cards can also be used with a smart card reader attachment
to a personal computer to authenticate a user.
Smart cards are much more popular in Europe than in the U.S. In
Europe the health insurance and banking industries use smart
cards extensively. Every German citizen has a smart card for
health insurance. Even though smart cards have been around in
their modern form for at least a decade, they are just starting to
take off in the U.S.
DEBIT CARD:
Debit cards are also known as check cards. Debit cards look like credit cards or ATM (automated teller machine) cards, but operate like cash or a personal check. Debit cards are different from credit cards. While a credit card is a way to "pay later," a debit card is a way to "pay now." When you use a debit card, your money is quickly deducted from your checking or savings account. Debit cards are accepted at many locations, including grocery stores, retail stores, gasoline stations, and restaurants. You can use your card anywhere merchants display your card's brand name or logo. They offer an alternative to carrying a checkbook or cash.
E-CHEQUE:
E-cheque or electronic cheque its used only bank account holder. E-cheque is very important of 21st century in banking sector. About more information of e-cheque:
•An e-Cheque is the electronic version or representation of paper cheque.
•The Information and Legal Framework on the E-Cheque is the same as that of the paper cheque’s.
•It can now be used in place of paper cheques to do any and all remote transactions.
•An E-cheque work the same way a cheque does, the cheque writer "writes" the e-Cheque using one of many types of electronic devices and "gives" the e-Cheque to the payee electronically. The payee "deposits" the Electronic Cheque receives credit, and the payee's bank "clears" the e-Cheque .
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