Ice Phishing

Used in blockchains when someone steals a user’s private keys through manipulation or trickery by deceiving the user (victim) into signing a transation that delegates approval of the user’s tokens to the scammer. In essence, it gives the scammer control over a user’s crypto assets. This can happen over a period of time of multiple ice phishing attacks allowing the scammer to accumulate approvals to the point of draining the user’s entire wallet.

ICF

See: International Classification of Functioning, Disability, and Health (ICF) . Also See: intermediate care facility (ICF) .

ICOB

the FSA’s Insurance Conduct of Business Rules, relating to the business processes involved in selling and administering non-investment insurance.

ICPs

Insurance Core Principles, Standards, Guidance and Assessment Methodology established by the IAIS to provide uniform international standards and guidance for the regulation of the insurance industry. The IAIS encourages members to have the 26 ICPs incorporated or reflected in all of its members’ regulatory frameworks. Although not binding on IAIS member jurisdictions, the ICPs are used by the IMF as a basis for carrying out assessments of the insurance sector under the Financial Sector Assessment Program (FSAP).

ID qualifier

Alpha characters or numbers that relate to either the medical provider’s state license number or national provider identifier. These data must be inserted on the CMS-1500 (08-05) claim form in Block 24I. ID qualifier.

identification card (ID card)

Health insurance card issued to the insured (member or subscriber) as proof of membership from a private insurance plan, managed care plan, or government program (see Figure I-1 ). ID cards do not guarantee eligibility for medical benefits but verify the patient has health coverage. It includes the insured’s name, member number, group number, type of coverage, effective date, deductible, copayment, and other information. This card is produced when a patient wishes to receive medical services, and usually the provider’s staff photocopies the front and back sides for reference when submitting an insurance claim. Also called membership card and health insurance card . Front (top) and back (bottom) sides of an insurance card.