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Customer authentication from remote locations

Comodo Two Factor Online Banking Authentication Provides Easy and Convenient Login From Public Computers

Comodo TwoFactor (TF) delivers Client certificates for authenticated user access from private computers and one-time passwords via phone/ SMS/ email for authenticated access from public PCs.

Building on Comodo's proven Client certificate solution for user authentication while they are at their their own computers, is now adding true two-factor security for user authentication when they are on public computers. Comodo is incorporating the use of one-time passwords in sessions when the user is traveling, to enable a secure, easy yet effective authentication login process. These one-time passwords can be delivered to customers through a variety of customer-selected options such as SMS messaging, email or telephone. With these enhancements, Comodo TF is now as effective as tokens for user authentication at remote locations yet with none of the cost or challenges of customer deployment.

Overview of key features:

  • Generation and acceptance of one-time passwords when the customer is at a remote location
  • A choice of delivery vehicles of the one-time password that the user selects, including SMS/ phone or email delivery
  • Enhanced administrative tools to facilitate easy introduction and maintenance of these new capabilities

Comodo TF with Client certificates is proven to be highly secure, reliable and easy for end user authentication when they are connecting from their authenticated computer. Now, when a customer is at a public computer, the authentication process can proceed with ease without sacrificing security through these one-time passwords.

Competitive Advantage

Comodo's solution surpasses other cookie-based user authentication approaches because these approaches do not to create a true two-factor authentication process when the user is logging in from a remote computer. Typically, these cookie-based solutions must revert to a weaker, multi-layered, one-factor approach to deliver user authentication at public computers

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