Criminals Crack and Steal Customer Data From Barnes & Noble Keypads
helix2301 writes with an excerpt from CNet "Hackers broke into keypads at more than 60 Barnes & Noble bookstores and made off with the credit card information for customers who shopped at the stores in the last month. At least one point-of-sale terminal in 63 different stores was compromised recording card details. Since discovering the breach, the company has uninstalled all 7,000 point-of-sale terminals from its hundreds of stores for examination."
Seriously, no irony.
They got hacked. They got the Feds. involved to catch the scum. They figured out who was "likely-impacted." Their notifying the banks involved, so hopefully the computers can catch any spending patterns that come from the breach. They pulled the infected equipment. They let the world know.
They'll still get my business.
Seems to be a common thread in these PIN pad hacks: they steal/buy/obtain one, hack it, then swap it with a "live" one, take that home, hack it, and repeat.
So why:
- don't the PIN pads have unique IDs?
- hasn't the terminal software been updated to sound an alarm when the stored PIN pad ID doesn't match the ID read from the PIN pad?
- doesn't the terminal alarm WHENEVER the PIN pad is disconnected?
It's not like this hasn't been happening for a while...
(and I predict the perpetrators, when caught, will have eastern European (FSR) names...)
Great, so what happens when you are denied a credit card. Seriously that is not a solution.
I have 2 checking accounts and a savings account. All money is direct deposited into my savings account. All bills go into checking account #1 which does not have a debit card. Account #2 has a debit card and a minimal balance of $1 to keep it open. If I know I need to buy something with the debit card I move the money to savings. You 1) never bounce a check ever again because you're purposefully put the money in an account that you use for bills, and you have 0 risk if your debit card # is stolen.
Problem solved,