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Gadget-free security a boon to racetracks

Gadget-free security a boon to racetracks

By:  Rosie Lombardi  On: 19 Jan 2006 For: IT World Canada Creator

Mobile security is a top priority for many businesses that want to offer high-end mobile customer applications. Two-factor security that is convenient and transparent to customers is increasingly seen as the first strategic domino that must fall to conduct mobile business effectively.

Once initialized, the device and user are uniquely associated, and authenticated at logon. If someone tried to enter the system by stealing a customer’s username and password via shoulder-surfing, explained Keech, it would not allow him to connect: both the customer’s device, which generates the OTP to authenticate the transaction, and his username and password are needed to successfully logon.

Equally attractive is Diversinet’s service bureau model for costing its wares and providing third-party security, said Keech. This allows clients like Magna to purchase OTPs, or soft tokens, on an as-needed basis, instead of sinking a lot of investment into infrastructure build-out and software licenses up-front before even knowing the size and composition of their new markets.

The simplicity of a single framework for all customers also had a strong appeal for Keech.

“There is one authentication method for all customers — in person, laptop, cell phone, whatever — in any country. We don’t have to implement something new every time,” he said.

CULTURAL ADVANTAGE

Wally Kowal, vice-president of marketing at Diversinet, pointed out one major cultural advantage of Diversinet’s approach compared with other two-factor security solutions that require a separate gadget to generate randomized passwords: “If you forget your gadget in the morning, you bug tech support for a temporary password. If you forget your phone, you go back and get it.”

Kowal also pointed out that distributing smart cards and hard tokens typically involves inconvenience to clients and their customers. Customers must present themselves in person to pick up the item, or wait impatiently for a mail-out or some other distribution method.

Not so with Diversinet’s soft tokens. “We provision over the air,” he explained. Clients provide Diversinet with their customers’ phone number, and Diversinet sends an SMS or e-mail with a link that allows customers to click and download the password-generating program to their cell phones.

“We’ve provisioned phones in Turkey from here,” he said.

For Magna’s age verification requirement, Diversinet creates a credential that is sent down when the device is initialized. “We can do what is essentially a credit check that verifies who you say you are and what your age is, and we can access your credit file,” he said. For geo-fencing, the location fix is derived from the device, assuming it is GPS-enabled — and most North American mobile devices will be within two years as older models are replaced with next-generation models.

Minimizing customer inconvenience while boosting customer confidence in banking security is a huge issue in the industry, said Kowal.

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Rosie Lombardi Rosie Lombardi is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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