PassMark Frequently Asked Questions
1. What is PassMark?
The PassMark Solution provides you added safety by helping
ensure that only you can access your bank account. Your
PassMark is a picture and caption that is a shared secret
between you and the bank. When you see your PassMark you can
be confident that you are at the legitimate bank web site, not
an imposter site.
2. Why do I need a PassMark?
PassMark is an enhanced security feature that helps
protect you while you access your on-line account. On the
Internet today, fraudsters attempt to steal your identity by
impersonating the web sites you trust. We are committed to
proactively protecting you, our customer, against such
attacks. PassMark helps us do this.
3. How does it work?
When you visit your branch office, you know our faces and
we know yours. PassMark does the same thing over the Internet.
It is a new method to identify us to you and you to us. When
you enroll in PassMark, you will select a secret picture and
caption known only to you. Whenever you log-in we will show
you this picture so you can rest assured that you are
accessing the real banking site and not an impostor site. We
also check the computer(s) or device(s) that you are using to
access the web site. Typically you will access the web site
from one or two computers, such as your work and home machine.
PassMark remembers your computer. Should you need to log-in
from a different computer, such as an Internet café, we will
take additional steps to verify your identity, such as ask you
to provide the answer to secret questions we both know the
answers to. PassMark remembers your computer by assigning a
unique identifier to each
4. How is PassMark more secure?
PassMarks protect you from accidentally revealing your
username and password to a fake site. In addition, if someone
does somehow get your username and password, he will still not
be able to access your account because he is not at your
registered computer.
5. What keeps somebody from stealing my
PassMark picture?
We only show you your PassMark picture and caption if you
log-in from your own computer, or after you have answered a
secret question. So, it is not possible for an unauthorized
person to get access to your picture.
6. Why am I being asked a question when
I try to log-in?
We ask you a secret question when we detect that you are
trying to log-in from a new computer. This is to prevent
someone with stolen passwords from logging into your account.
Since only you know the answer to the questions, we will know
it’s really you. Generally you will be asked to answer a
secret question only when you log-in for the first time from a
new computer. After you answer the question, you will be
asked whether we should remember this computer for future
log-ins. If you are using a personal computer, you should
answer yes. If you are using a public terminal, you will want
to answer no.
7. Can I access my account from multiple
computers?
Yes, you can still access your bank account from any
number of computers. If you log-in from a new computer or a
public terminal, you will just need to go through one extra
step of answering a secret question. This helps protect you by
keeping unauthorized people from accessing your valuable
information. There is no limit on how many different computers
you can use to log-in to your bank account.
8. I am not an Internet expert. How easy
is PassMark to use?
PassMark is extremely simple for anyone to use. You don’t
need to memorize anything new—just use the site as usual and
look for your PassMark at log-in.
9. I share my computer with someone who
has their own bank account. Can both of us still log-in from
this machine?
Yes, you can both use the same computer to log-in to your
individual bank accounts. There is no limit on how many
people can log-in into the bank web site from the same
computer.
10. What happens if someone steals my
password? How will PassMark keep them from accessing my
account?
When someone tries to log-in using your stolen user name
and password, we will recognize that they are logging in from
a different computer, and ask them a secret question. Since
only you know the answers to your secret questions, they will
not be able to give a correct answer. They will not be able to
log-in.
11. Can I change my PassMark picture and
caption?
Yes, you can change your PassMark picture and caption at
any time. To make the change, go to the account maintenance
link after you log-in to your account.
12. How do you know I am logging in from
my own computer?
When you log-in for the first time from a new computer, we
put a secure (encrypted) cookie on your computer. This cookie
contains a randomly generated unique number that identifies
your computer. The cookie is visible only to the bank web site
and does not contain any of your personal information. When
you log-in after that, your web browser sends us this cookie.
This lets us know that this is your computer.
13. What is Phishing?
Recently there have been attempts by fraudsters to trick
people into revealing their personal information, such as
passwords, by creating fake web sites that look very much like
the sites of legitimate financial institutions. They send out
emails randomly with links to these fake web sites. This
phenomenon has been called Phishing, (pronounced “fishing”).
14. I am trying to log-in from my own
computer, but the bank’s web site is not showing me my
PassMark. Instead, it is asking me a question. What is
happening?
This might happen in rare cases if you have deleted all
cookies on your computer. Before answering a secret question
or entering your password, make sure that you are going to the
legitimate bank web site. The easiest way to ensure this is by
typing the URL of the bank (www.bank.com) directly into your
web browser. Then, after you answer the security question, you
should see your secret PassMark next to the password field. If
your PassMark is there, you can be confident that you are at
the legitimate web site and can enter your password.
15. What is a Trojan or Key Logger?
Some fraudsters have been putting programs on random computers
in order to harvest your user id and password information used
to log-in to web sites. They collect this information and
secretly transmit it to their own computers and attempt to
log-in to your site. These are called Trojans (short for
Trojan Horse) or Key Loggers (for logging your keystrokes).
16. How does PassMark protect me from a
Trojan or Key Logger?
Once you have a PassMark and have registered your
computer, even if a fraudster steals our login ID and
Password, his computer will not be registered and he will not
be able to log-in as you; thus, PassMarks protect your
identity and your account.