Credit Card Breach At P.F. Chang's
schwit1 tips a post by Brian Krebs saying that P.F. Chang's China Bistro, a nationwide restaurant chain, is the latest victim of a massive data breach. The company is currently investigating. Krebs writes:
On June 9, thousands of newly-stolen credit and debit cards went up for sale on rescator[dot]so, an underground store best known for selling tens of millions of cards stolen in the Target breach. Several banks contacted by KrebsOnSecurity said they acquired from this new batch multiple cards that were previously issued to customers, and found that all had been used at P.F. Chang's locations between the beginning of March 2014 and May 19, 2014. ... The items for sale are not cards, per se, but instead data copied from the magnetic stripe on the backs of credit cards. Armed with this information, thieves can re-encode the data onto new plastic and then use the counterfeit cards to buy high-priced items at big box stores, goods that can be quickly resold for cash (think iPads and gift cards, for example).
I use cash or checks for 99% of my purchases. That way I avoid this issue. I'm also an old guy so "Get off my lawn!"
If it's stripe data, that implies the POS readers were compromised, just like Target. Interesting.
Because PCI compliance means security! Brought to you by my PCI Compliance Consulting Firm.
Target store is going to change its name to Kick Me.
Table-ized A.I.
...but half an hour later, it was empty again.
Cloudiot: A person who does not see offsite storage as a way to lose control over access to his or her own data.
Nothing in the article says they stored these numbers. Target had their card readers compromised. It could be the same case here.
Minimize the number of places you expose your CC numbers. Pay cash where feasible. Use debit cards ONLY at bank terminals. Be especially careful at restaurants and gas stations.
I was wondering the exact same thing. They don't like to make it known that they're the same company, so I wonder if they use the same CC processing system or not.
Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
And yes, I am serious. I am now going to get my flame suite on though.
Because when deadbeat freeloaders file chargebacks they have to have the data to prove they actually swiped a card.
Exactly, there's no law to prohibit anyone from storing CC information, just a strong suggestion not to. Best practice preaches PCI/DSS compliance, but really it's the CC schemes that are broken. The schemes represent a compromise between convenience and 'security'. Here's an interesting Twitter stream: Need A Debit Card?, some even post photographs of both sides of the card and then wonder why their accounts are empty.
Task Mangler
... you have bigger damage to worry about than your credit, like your colon.
There were two suspicious charges in New York state: $20 at Burger King and $300 at Kohls, both declined (yah!). I used that CC at PF Changes in late March.
The thing I like about bitcoin is it allows the user to determine how secure or insecure they wish to be while with credit cards they are dependent upon multiple third parties security measures and the weakest link in the chain can expose you to fraud. I never had an issue with fraud in Bitcoin and have had multiple issues with fraud with debit/cc's where I needed to get replacement cards and was liable for the deductible.
When I pay a retailer with Bitcoin I don't have to worry about identity theft or my account being compromised.
The only way almost all credit card thefts have been realized is their sale on different web sites. These Security personal check the sites at regular intervals (or informed of them) then point and say AH! HA!
Bitcoin does solve the issue of being able to electronically pay people you may not trust, but so does PayPal. Bitcoin transactions are slow to confirm, you have no protection as a buyer to perform a chargeback (for example, you buy tickets for a concert that turn out to be counterfeit) and the price of Bitcoin is extremely unstable. Bitcoin also is not really free of transaction fees, either. You will pay a fee to an exchange when buying Bitcoin with fiat.
Bitcoin's deflationary design also makes it lousy as a currency, since why would you use it to buy two pizzas today when that same amount a few years from now might buy you a Tesla Model S?
Cryptocurrency probably does have a place in the future of commerce, but it will probably be something that addresses Bitcoin's serious shortcomings.
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DRM is like antifreeze, to the MPAA/RIAA it's sweet, to the consumers it's poison.
And by massive they mean "On June 9, thousands of newly-stolen credit and debit cards went up for sale on rescator[dot]so...". Hardly on the scale of the Target breach so far.
'The tyrant will always find pretext for his tyranny.' - Aesop's Fables
PCI/DSS isn't simply about being able to claim nebulous adherence to "best practices"; it's about an organization's ability to maintain a business relationship with their customers and an upstream merchant account provider under certain agreed upon minimum standards for data security. Quoting PCI Data Storage Do’s and Don’ts:
Do not store sensitive authentication data contained in the payment card’s storage chip or full magnetic stripe, including the printed 3-4 digit card validation code on the front or back of the payment card after authorization.
This point in particular is not flexible in nature. Storing that specific information, or failing to take specific steps to secure the access perimeter and specific systems through which said information traverses, are quick routes to termination of a merchant agreement. Such failures may also expose a business to significant legal liability; litigation rapidly becomes impressively expensive in the event of a breach whereby it comes to light that the business in question failed to follow basic PCI/DSS tenets, and said legal proceedings may turn into an even greater circus if dominant upstream EFT players such as Visa, etc believe there is reason to assume negligence on the part of an auditing firm that supposedly delivered a satisfactory report on compliance to the errant business. Reference the recent Target debacle for a fine example of such complications.
There are no magic bullets, but there are baselines. Those baselines could certainly use significant improvement, but that doesn't matter much if the business servicing the consumer doesn't care to consider even basic adherence to agreed upon information security standards as a critical factor.
Write failed: Broken pipe
What the fuck. That twitter feed might as well be titled "the stupidest people in the world".
I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
Given that China is the 3rd most visited country in the world, this is probably not nationwide problem, but also for tourists who have been there and have paid with credit card at this China bistro chain.
It's good that such a problem hasn't happened in one of European countries, or in USA, because the problem would have likely been much bigger due to larger base of people using credit cards.
(here's hopelessly hoping that editors do better job writing "articles" outside their US-only minds)