40 Million People Hacked - YOU as Identity Theft Victim
Saturday, MasterCard blamed a vendor of ALL credit card
providers called CardSystems Solutions, Inc., a third-party
processor of payment card data, as the source of loss of 40
million consumers credit card information. As is pointed out by several newspaper and web articles over
the last few weeks, each recapping long lists of financial
information data breaches, something's gotta give before we
entirely lose trust in financial institutions, data brokers
and credit bureaus. How much privacy loss can we take
without acting? These types of data loss were very likely common and have
very probably been going on for a very long time. The
difference is that now, THEY ARE REQUIRED BY LAW TO DISCLOSE
THOSE LOSSES - not just in California, but in many states.
National disclosure laws on data security breaches are being
considered in Congress. I suggest that these breaches of data security all came to
light due to the California law requiring disclosure from
companies suffering hacking loss or leaks or social
engineering or crooked employees or organized crime rings
posing as "legitimate" customers. All of the above have been
given as reasons for security lapses or poor security
policies. About three years ago, a friend told me his paycheck deposit
to Bank of America went missing from account records after
he took his check to the bank on Friday. By Monday, Bank of
America was in the news claiming a computer glitch had
disappeared the entire day's deposits. I mumbled to myself,
"I'll bet that was a hack and that hacker just made a huge
offshore banking deposit with B of A depositors' money." But we didn't find out why it happened in that particular
case because there was no disclosure law in place at the
time. Now we have disclosure laws that mandate notice of
security breaches. Now suddenly - huge financial services
hacks and devious criminal social engineering outfits posing
as legitimate customers and apparently "innocent" losses by
transport companies of backup tapes begin to come to light. This spate of data loss incidents is proof of the need for
corporate "sunshine laws" that make public notice mandatory
of those data losses that threaten customer information. Who is going to lose here - the public, the corporations,
the criminals, or the government? I'd prefer that the bad
guys get the shaft and take down crooked company insiders
that either facilitate data loss by underfunding security
and encryption or participate in data theft or loss in any
form - even if that participation is security negligence. Financial companies and data brokers have been covering up
the losses and keeping quiet about hacks so as not to worry
or frighten their customers. But that practice is
essentially ended now that they must notify the public and
disclose those losses instead of hushing them up. Keeping the breaches hidden from public view is bad practice
as it maintains the status quo. Disclosure will facilitate
internal corporate lockdowns on the data and all access to
it. Disclosure will educate the public to the lack of
security and danger to the sensitive information we all
provide rather casually and routinely to businesses. As the following link to a silicon.com story suggests, we
cannot take much more of this lack of regard to privacy and
must lock down financially sensitive data securely and must
begin to hold data brokers, bureaus and handlers VERY
accountable. Insist to your elected representatives that your financial
data be locked down, encrypted and guarded by those
entrusted with storing, transporting and using it. Since our
financial, medical and legal lives are increasingly being
housed in digital form and transmitted between data centers
of multiple handlers - we need to know it is secure. We also
need to know when that security has been breached and our
data compromised or lost. Thieves are becoming more aware of the ease with which they
can find and access financial data. Hacking is not the
source of the greatest losses. Organized crime has easily found their way into our
financial records by simply paying for it by posing as
"legitimate" business customers of information brokers such
as ChoicePoint and Lexis/Nexis. Any business can buy
financial and credit information from those information
bureaus and credit reporting agencies by meeting rather lax
requirements for "need to know" that data. As long as it is possible to purchase our sensitive data
from brokers and bureaus, organized crime will
"legitimately" buy it from those sources, then ruin our
credit by selling that information at a higher price in
identity theft schemes. Since disclosure laws have come into effect, those breaches
have been made public, credit cards cancelled before losses
can occur and credit reports monitored to watch for
suspicious activity. The bad guys activities are squelched
because we are made aware of the possibility our information
has been compromised. Not all blame can go to financial institutions and data
brokers. Protect your own private data by protecting your
computer records at home, in the office, on your laptop and
in your PDA by using basic keyword security and locking down
files. Use built in encryption on your operating system and
your home network to keep data secure. Then be certain to
clear that sensitive data off the computer when you sell it
or throw it away. Data security is something we all need to take seriously and
the corporate breaches are dramatic illustrations of how
important it has become to build digital fortresses around
our critical financial, legal and medical information. Mike Banks Valentine is a privacy advocate and blogs about
privacy issues at privacynotes.com/
privacy_blog/">PrivacyNotes.com
You can read more about identity theft issues at:
shorl.com/hudryrygepregru">Publish101 Contact MikeValentine for Search Engine Optimization
www.seoptimism.com/SEO_Contact.htm">http://www.seoptimism.com
MORE RESOURCES:
Updated : Fri, 29 Aug 2008 21:40:33 GMT
ScanSafe Blocks More Malware in July 2008 Than in the Whole of 2007 MarketWatch - Aug 27, 2008 ScanSafe is the largest global provider of SaaS Web Security , ensuring a safe and productive Internet environment for businesses. ... Publ.Date : Wed, 27 Aug 2008 16:05:19 GMT
Week in review: Taming the wild Web CNET News, CA - 3 hours ago IE 8 adds a Security pull-down menu between Page and Tools on the main toolbar. In addition to blocking phishing sites, IE 8 now highlights the main domain ... Publ.Date : Fri, 29 Aug 2008 18:00:27 GMT
Sify IE8 Beta 2 Ratchets Up Security , Firefox Comparisons CRN, NY - Aug 28, 2008 Some of the other advances to IE8 include Web slices, which lets users subscribe to the content on different parts of Web pages and have it sent directly to ... Internet Explorer 8 Release Approaches As Microsoft Offers Second Beta InformationWeek vnunet analysis: Will IE8 cause more problems than it solves? VNUNet.com Biz break: iPhone flaw could expose e-mail to unauthorized viewers San Jose Mercury News Redmondmag.com - GCN.com all 886 news articles Publ.Date : Thu, 28 Aug 2008 19:47:44 GMT
Web Application Hacks: Upping The Arms Race InformationWeek, NY - Aug 27, 2008 Mary Landesman, senior security researcher at ScanSafe, says her Web security services firm is also seeing more obfuscation, including encryption, ... Publ.Date : Thu, 28 Aug 2008 02:37:25 GMT
RTE.ie Ground Control To Major Tom: Check Your Laptop For Worms CRN, NY - Aug 27, 2008 The Web site, which broke the news, said that at a level 0, NASA believes that the virus was "never a threat to any of the computers used for cmd and cntl ... Space station computer virus raises security concerns New Scientist (subscription) One Giant Leap for Malware TechNewsWorld Computer Virus Infiltrates Laptops at International Space Station FOXNews Scientific American - Virus Bulletin all 215 news articles Publ.Date : Wed, 27 Aug 2008 20:48:55 GMT
ReadyNation Launches Disaster Preparedness Web Site for Families MarketWatch - 8 hours ago ReadyNation also offers Homeland Security -recommended disaster supplies and emergency kits enabling survival. For more information, visit www. ... Publ.Date : Fri, 29 Aug 2008 13:35:07 GMT
The depressing future of the Internet ZDNet - 23 hours ago So what will be the death of the Internet and/or the world wide web ? Security flaws? Backend infrastructure crumbling? Spam, crap, Viagra and more porn than ... Publ.Date : Thu, 28 Aug 2008 22:16:19 GMT
Security Briefs MSDN Magazine - Aug 28, 2008 Security professionals—even Web security professionals—often disagree with me when I make this claim. But consider that some of the most damaging attack ... Publ.Date : Thu, 28 Aug 2008 19:55:27 GMT
Back to School Days Raise Internet Security Concerns for Parents TMCnet - Aug 28, 2008 ... told TMCnet that there are three things that the ISPs should do in the Web security space to ensure that children and families are protected from ... Publ.Date : Thu, 28 Aug 2008 19:27:15 GMT
calfordseaden cuts security administration time by 99 percent with ... Security Park, UK - 22 hours ago In addition to purchasing the ES1000, the company also implemented the Sophos WS1000 web security solution, not only to defend its corporate network against ... IT security admin time drastically reduced by Sophos appliance SC Magazine UK all 2 news articles Publ.Date : Thu, 28 Aug 2008 23:05:34 GMT
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