FFIEC News
RSA Anti Fraud Command Center Acheives New Milestone
(Nov 06, 2007)-- RSA, The Security Division of EMC highlighted several major accomplishments in consumer protection over the first three quarters of 2007. These successes include reaching impressive milestones in the number of online financial transactions processed by RSA's systems; in customer adoption of the RSA Go ID(SM) Authentication Service; and in anti-fraud protection.
"RSA is proud to have built one of the most comprehensive suites of solutions in the industry, both for the protection of customers' information and identities and for the mitigation of online fraud," stated Art Coviello, Executive Vice President of EMC and President at RSA. "Organizations are increasingly looking to RSA to help them realize the full value of their information assets, and to enable the acceleration of their business through customer confidence and robust threat management."
As of September 30, 2007, RSA has signed deals to implement the RSA Go ID Authentication Service -- or begun implementation -- with more than 20 financial institutions, and tens of thousands of users have received RSA Go ID credentials for everyday use. The RSA Go ID Authentication Service is designed to allow users to access multiple online accounts with a single authenticator, without requiring trust relationships between account providers. The service is engineered to manage the entire authentication lifecycle including fulfillment, activation and authentication. Multiple authenticators and multiple types of authenticators can also be used to access one account.
The RSA Go ID Authentication Service is engineered to enable account providers to offer their customers both hardware tokens and the RSA Go ID Toolbar based on customer behavior, lifestyle and needs. Indeed, six of the institutions using the RSA Go ID service have deployed it in its toolbar format. The toolbar is designed to eliminate any hardware and token fulfillment costs as well as inventory management and lead times. In addition, the RSA Go ID Toolbar is engineered to provide an extra layer of defense against phishing, pharming and man-in-the-middle attacks due to its list of trusted sites.
The RSA Go ID Authentication Service is designed to either act as the primary authentication service or to work in conjunction with other products such as RSA(R) Adaptive Authentication.
Christopher Young, Vice President and General Manager of the Identity and Access Assurance Group at RSA, commented: "Following a year of racing against the clock for US financial institutions to comply with the FFIEC guidance, organizations in the sector remain impressively alert to an ever-shifting fraud landscape and to the need to maintain customer confidence in the viability of the Internet as a channel for business."
As of September 30, 2007, RSA's risk engine -- used within the RSA Adaptive Authentication and RSA(R) Transaction Monitoring solutions -- has processed more than seven billion online transactions. Over recent months the rate of processed transactions has accelerated sharply, through the addition of new customers and end-users, and with financial institutions logging more activities as they seek to offer greater protection. RSA expects that it will shortly be handling more than one billion transactions every month.
As the core of the RSA Adaptive Authentication and RSA Transaction Monitoring solutions for remote channel fraud, the sophisticated risk engine is designed to analyze each transaction based on a multitude of parameters and sources, such as IP geo-location, device ID, ANI transaction amount and data from the RSA eFraudNetwork community. Once a risk score has been generated, each transaction is either allowed to continue without challenge, or appropriate action -- such as logging, or additional authentication if necessary -- is invoked according to the specific system configuration. As measured by major clients who share full fraud data with RSA, RSA's risk engine has consistently detected 75%-95% of fraud in its various deployments over the past three years.
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