TJX Is Biggest Data Breach Ever
jcatcw writes "Jaikumar Vijayan reports for Computerworld that TJX is finally offering more details about the extent of the compromise which, at 45.6M cards, is the biggest ever. He has been following the story since it started. The systems that were broken into processed payment card, checks, and returns for customers of T.J. Maxx, Marshalls, HomeGoods, and A.J. Wright stores in the U.S. and Puerto Rico, and customers of Winners and HomeSense stores in Canada and T.K. Maxx in the U.K. Customer names and addresses were not included in the stolen data. So far the company has spent about $5 million in connection with the breach. Several lawsuits that have been filed against the company, including a suit by the Arkansas Carpenters Pension Fund, one of its shareholders, for failure to divulge more details about the breach."
Suggested new tag for stories like this - pwnshop
You can't talk about Wikipedia's flaws on Wikipedia
The six named people must have had some deep insight to the code on which these systems were running. Maybe they had inside help. If I really wanted to be paranoid I'd suggest that the six named people were caught port-scanning the servers and they're being used as the fall guys so that the real criminals, probably insiders, can slip out the back door.
Patriot illegal HP domestic wiretap Enron insider FBI trading Martha 9/11 Stewart Congressional inquiry comes to mind.
the NPG electrode was replaced with carbon blac
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The answer isn't expensive smart cards with new infrastructure. As you've stated, the smart card chips aren't used in the majority of places.
Fortunately, we don't have to so that. It's way simpler.
1. Require all credit cards to add a photograph to the back as well as a signature panel. Overlay parts of the photo with holograms to make sure it's tough to copy. (It's not like the "lost card" field does fuck all when you've lost the card.)
2. Put identity photographs in everyone's credit history. If you're getting a mortgage or credit card or something else where you have to go in person, then it's pretty obvious if you're faking it.
3. Have the credit agency computers call a number listed in the credit history every time the history is accessed. ("This is Equifax. Beardo has applied for a $500k mortgage. If you are not aware of this transaction, call 1-800-HEY-WAIT.")
That's it.
The reason we won't see this - ever - is because it will cost the banks money to implement. When they can instead blame the victims for their DARING to have their stuff stolen, why bother to invest in making a secure environment? After all, it's perfectly secure from the bank's point of view.
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ECHELON is a government program to find words like bomb, jihad, plutonium, assassinate, and anarchy.