In October, a customer called a bank to freeze all his cards and savings, only to discover later that not all fund transfers were disabled.
It could well be that the customer expected the bank's "kill switch" to be a master switch in turning off the funding tap for everything linked to it further downstream – and reasonably so.
But a day later, the customer's compromised Wise multi-currency e-wallet could still be topped up with his linked POSB account. An unauthorised transfer of a total of $3,000 eventually went to an unknown overseas account through Wise.
The customer had no clue the transactions took place until it was too late.
He was a victim of an elaborate hack that involved a criminal abusing stolen login credentials to control his e-SIM, including one-time passwords, and online financial accounts. It did not help that the victim used the same login credentials across multiple online accounts, easing the hacker's access to these accounts.
The incident has thrown a spotlight on what the banking kill switch actually does.
How did the victim still lose money even though he had frozen his cards and savings?
Since October 2022, all retail banks here have rolled out their versions of the mandatory kill switch to let customers freeze all cards and accounts if they suspect their login credentials have been compromised.
The kill switch – which can be turned on by calling a bank hotline, or via the bank's app or website – is meant to limit potential losses to hackers, after some 790 OCBC Bank customers were swindled of $13.7 million in phishing attacks in December 2021 and January 2022.
But there is one big problem.
Depending on which bank you speak to, the kill switch has a different function.
Banks are divided into two camps over which services their kill switches affect, particularly when it involves Giro, a direct debit mechanism first set up in 1984 for people to pay bills.
Bu hikaye The Straits Times dergisinin December 16, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye The Straits Times dergisinin December 16, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
Jay-Z will seek dismissal of sexual assault lawsuit his lawyer calls a 'sham'
Lawyers for Jay-Z (right) plan to ask a judge to toss a lawsuit accusing the American rapper of raping a 13-year-old in 2000, pointing to what they described as \"glaring inconsistencies\" that emerged in an NBC interview of the accuser, who was not named in the suit.
Comedian Jimmy O. Yang finds people who look more like him than himself in lookalike contest
It looks like there are Asians out there who look more like Jimmy O. Yang than the man himself, said the Hong Kong-born American actor and stand-up comedian.
Brazil judge orders Adele song to be pulled globally
A Brazilian judge has ordered a song by British pop superstar Adele (left), Million Years Ago (2015), to be pulled worldwide - including on streaming services - over an ongoing plagiarism claim by a Brazilian composer.
Local musician-TikToker first from Asia to be nominated
Drumeo Awards: TikTok Drummer of the Year category
Malcolm In The Middle is getting a four-episode revival on Disney+
NEW YORK - One of America's wackiest families is making a comeback.
Pedro Almodovar is not lost in translation
Working in English and directing Hollywood stars can be difficult for European directors. But the Spanish director's The Room Next Door is an exception
Lessons from a dog attack
Viewpoint Canines may bite and scratch when excited or caught by surprise
Could dark chocolate reduce risk of diabetes?
If you have long assumed that you must deprive yourself of delicious foods to be healthy, a new study in medical journal The BMJ offers encouraging news: Eating dark chocolate has been associated with a reduced risk of developing Type 2 diabetes.
BAD BACK
More teens and young adults hit with degenerative disc disease
Diplomacy ● Remark about chai in poor taste
I refer to the article \"No shortage of chai for Singapore's envoy in India after 'tasteless' brew post goes viral\" (Dec 16).