Gift Card Hacking
TheSauce writes "MSNBC has this discussion of how easy it is to hack and jack the contents of those lovely Plastic Gift Cards one sees at most Mass Merchants and Consumer Electronics stores.
One retailer notes that the odds of this occuring are about at the level of being pickpocketed."
I worked at Barnes and Noble for a while a couple Christmases ago, and here's how their gift card system worked:
When you got the card, it was preauthorized with a certain amount of money in a certain account number, like any other debit card. The account number was on the magstrip of the card, was printed on the card, but was _also_ printed on the gift receipt that came with the card.
Now, all that was necessary to redeem the gift card was that number. But most people just tossed the second receipt. Which meant that a quick swipe through the trash outside the store doors could probably yield a few hundred dollars worth of gift card credit as yet unredeemed.
Nice, eh? Even when we told people expressly not to do it, they still did. Wonder how many got burned.
--saint
I can see why the retailers don't really care. If someone forges a paper gift certificate and redeems it, the store is out the money. The thieves are just printing money.
But when someone forges a stored-value card, they're stealing from other customers. The "value" has already been paid for, so the store doesn't lose anything.
-- Don't Tase me, bro!