By CHARLES MWANIKI
Posted Thursday, July 11 2013 at 16:57
Posted Thursday, July 11 2013 at 16:57
In Summary
- The simple act of withdrawing money from your accounts is about to enter a new phase of the digital age, following the introduction of ATM machines with a biometric fingerprint scanner.
- The fingerprint scanner, which will be used alongside the traditional PIN system, is the latest in a line of efforts by the banking industry to thwart the menace of ATM fraudsters and scammers.
Soon before you can get money from the Automated Teller Machine (ATM) a finger print will be required.
The simple act of withdrawing money from your
accounts is about to enter a new phase of the digital age, following the
introduction of ATM machines with a biometric fingerprint scanner.
The fingerprint scanner, which will be used
alongside the traditional PIN system, is the latest in a line of efforts
by the banking industry to thwart the menace of ATM fraudsters and
scammers.
A new line of ATM machines, launched last week, in
Nairobi, by Diebold, an American tech company, and Kenyan IT solutions
firm Tracom Services incorporates the biometric function alongside a
raft of other security features to help banks and their customers fight
fraudsters.
The extra safety features an the ATMs are being
brought in as the banking industry moves from the old magnetic strip ATM
cards and migrating to the new generation micro chip embedded cards
that have the EMV (Europay MasterCard Visa) technology designed to make
it more difficult to illegally scan card details.
Access
Speaking during the launch of the new ATMs,
Diebold Product marketing manager of ATMs Martin Koffijberg said the
biometric sensor will be optional on ATM machines as per the
requirements of the banks.
“Card trapping is regaining popularity due to the
EMV technology that has countered the problem of skimming. With the
fingerprint required to complete a transaction, a fraudster who traps
the card will still not be able to access the account afterwards,” said
Mr Koffijberg.
In order for a customer to access the feature, he
or she will have to submit additional details to the bank, including
having their prints scanned and entered into the banks database.
The account will then be programmed so that the
ATM machine demands a fingerprint authentication before allowing the
transaction to go ahead.
“The fingerprint is the one unique thing that a
fraudster cannot steal from a banks customer,” added Tracom Services
business development manager Andrew Muiruri.
The new ATMs will additionally have a one way
safety lock system that will prevent insertion of jammers into the money
dispensing unit, helping deal with the problem of fraudsters who use
jammers to block the cash from the ATM, removing it after a frustrated
customer moves out of the ATM lobby.
The card insertion slot also comes with a sensor
that detects whether any object other than the card is inserted, and
stops the transaction detaining the card.
Scammers have been placing objects in the ATM
slots which skim and mimic card details which are later used to
duplicate the card and fraudulently fleece the owner’s account.
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