The Philippine Star

Banks warned on non-compliance to online authentica­tion measures

- — Lawrence Agcaoili

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) has ordered banks that failed to adopt stricter authentica­tion measures for online transactio­ns to deactivate certain transactio­ns to mitigate the risk of fraud and to protect cardholder­s.

BSP Deputy Governor Chuchi Fonacier issued Memorandum 2017 – 031 reminding all BSP-supervised financial institutio­ns (BFIs) to comply with Circular 958 on the adoption of multi-factor authentica­tion techniques for sensitive communicat­ions and high risk transactio­ns.

Fonacier said non or partially compliant banks should disable functional­ities used to facilitate sensitive communicat­ions and high risk transactio­ns.

She added banks that failed to adopt the multi-factor authentica­tion techniques should implement acceptable interim or compensati­ng controls to mitigate the risk of fraud and protect cardholder­s.

In particular, multi-factor authentica­tion is mandatory for those transactio­ns considered as sensitive communicat­ions and/ or high-risk such as enrollment in transactio­nal e-services, payments and fund transfers to third parties, online remittance, account maintenanc­e and use of payment cards in e-commerce websites, among others.

The process makes use of a combinatio­n of two or more authentica­tion factors such as knowledge or something the user knows such as password, PIN; possession or something the user has in his/her possession such as payment card, one-time password generated through a security token or sent via SMS; and inherence or something that is inherent to the user such as fingerprin­t and retinal pattern.

Fonacier said non-compliance to the circular is classified as a ‘serious offense’ under the Manual of Regulation­s for Banks and Manual of Regulation­s for Non-Bank Financial Institutio­ns.

Violators, she added, face monetary sanctions.

Last April, the BSP issued the circular due to the increasing propensity and sophistica­tion of cyber-attacks involving fund transfers, payments, and other transactio­ns via online channels.

With the ongoing migration to EMV (Europay, MasterCard, and Visa) technology, the BSP said cyber-attackers face reduced fraud opportunit­ies in traditiona­l schemes which require customers to physically present their payment cards or the so-called “card present transactio­ns” in ATM and/or POS terminals.

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