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Black Cluster
July 25th, 2005, 04:43 PM
More than 40 million credit card customers are at risk of fraud after hackers pilfered data from a US company that processes online transactions.

CardSystems Solutions, a payment processing firm based in Arizona, US, has also admitted to backing up thousands of records - contrary to proper procedure - potentially giving hackers easy access during the network intrusion.

The breach was identified by Mastercard, which commissioned an independent investigation at CardSystems Solutions, following an unusually high number of fraudulent transactions.

The investigation was carried out in May 2005 by computer forensics experts who discovered a rogue computer program installed on the company's network and found evidence that more than 40 million sets of credit card details may be been stolen by cyber-intruders. Several tens of thousands of cards are at particular risk, as there is clear evidence they were copied from the system.

“Research purposes”
On Friday, 17 June, Mastercard issued a statement warning that 13.9 million of its customers are among those affected. And a statement issued on the same day by CardSystems Solutions emphasises the severity of the break in. "We understand and fully appreciate the seriousness of the situation," the statement reads. "Our customers and their customers are our lifeblood. We are sparing no effort to get to the bottom of this matter."

But CardSystems has also admitted to mismanaging thousands of card records which were subsequently stolen. John Perry, chief executive of CardSystems Solutions, told The New York Times that more than 200,000 records had been backed up on its systems for "research purposes", contrary to proper procedure.

Mastercard and Visa prohibit payment processing companies from retaining card information after a transaction has been completed. "We should not have been doing that," Perry says. "That, however, has been remediated."

Single breach
Investigators first step will be to trawl through logs to try and identify the network addresses of the computer used to break into the network, says Neil Barrett, a computer security expert with UK company Information Risk Management.

However, he adds that such information can be fairly easily disguised in order to frustrate the efforts of investigators. Another approach is to watch for fraudulent transactions involving stolen information, and then attempt to trace this back to the culprits of the break-in.

Peter Sommer, a computer security expert at the London School of Economics, also in the UK, says the incident merely highlights the dangers of mishandling sensitive customer data. "There's nothing new about this risk, and the end user can do nothing," Sommer told New Scientist. "Most security breaches happen simply because hackers are persistent. And, if you are holding important information like this, you can't afford a single breach."

Barrett also admits that such a crime seems inevitable, given the number of transactions occurring online everyday. "It's criminal business as usual, I'm afraid," he says.


Source (http://www.newscientist.com/channel/info-tech/dn7545)

Tachyon
July 25th, 2005, 04:57 PM
Not trying to be a jerk, but this is over a month old.

http://www.antionline.com/showthread.php?s=&threadid=268850&highlight=credit+card+stolen

Plus see the date on the source article

Just a heads up so folks don't think this happened again since.

Black Cluster
July 25th, 2005, 05:01 PM
Hey thanks,

I tried the search engine but with no avail ... not matches were found ...

sorry for posting it again ....

Tachyon
July 25th, 2005, 05:03 PM
No worries! =)

It's monday after all.

zencoder
July 25th, 2005, 05:05 PM
I think or more current relevance would be these (http://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2005/07/visa_and_amex_d.html) stories (http://www.ajc.com/news/content/business/0705/20bizcardsystems.html).

zencoder
July 25th, 2005, 05:07 PM
Originally posted here (http://www.AntiOnline.com/showthread.php?threadid=269529#post851432) by Black Cluster
Hey thanks,

I tried the search engine but with no avail ... not matches were found ...

sorry for posting it again ....

Well, I think the point is, the ARTICLE you linked is that old...

hesperus
July 26th, 2005, 03:24 AM
Update :

Visa bars CardSystems from handling any more transactions.

In a new development, Visa USA have taken the unprecedented step of barring CardSystems from handling any further Visa transactions;

"CardSystems has not corrected, and cannot at this point correct, the failure to provide proper data security for those accounts," said Tim Murphy, Visa's senior vice president for operations in a memorandum sent to several banks. "Visa USA has decided that CardSystems should not continue to participate as an agent in the Visa system."

Yesterday, CardSystems CEO John Perry was up before Congress to answer questions from the House Financial Services Committee, which is holding hearings into the current spate of data thefts. Perry told Reuters he thought prospects for CardSystems looked bleak:

"With that staring us in the face, it certainly means we would go out of business because, if you can't process with a major brand such as Visa, you can't process at all,"

Source (http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20050722-5129.html)

zencoder
July 26th, 2005, 04:11 PM
I wonder who handled their PCI assessment? It either was done very poorly, or they get a very bad report back and didn't make enough effort to change their ways.

Either way, I applaud Visa's decision. Companies that play hinky games with personal information need to get slapped when they don't excercise due dilligence.

Kthln01
July 26th, 2005, 05:12 PM
thank goodness i'm still paying on a maxed-out mastercard from freshman year!
its amazing how quickly five hundred can multiply (several times over!)

hack up!!!