Largest Data Breach Disclosed During Inauguration 168
rmogull writes "Brian Krebs over at the Washington Post just published a story that Heartland Payment Systems disclosed what may be the largest data breach in history. Today. During the inauguration. Heartland processes over 100 million transactions a month, mostly from small to medium-sized businesses, and doesn't know how many cards were compromised. The breach was discovered after tracing fraud in the system back to Heartland, and involved malicious software snooping their internal network. I've written some additional analysis on this and similar breaches. It's interesting that the biggest breaches now involve attacks installing malicious software to sniff data — including TJX, Hannaford, Cardsystems, and now Heartland Payment Systems." One bit of good news out of this massive breach is that, according to Heartland's CFO, "The nature of the [breach] is such that card-not-present transactions are actually quite difficult for the bad guys to do because one piece of information we know they did not get was an address." Heartland just put up a press release on the breach.
Re:WTF??? (Score:3, Interesting)
Ahh...now I get it. Still, there was that plane that landed in the Hudson a few days back, yesterday was MLK day, the Super Bowl will be in a couple of weeks. Not to mention that it would seem that it would be in their best interests to get the word out to minimize losses.
Re:WTF??? (Score:5, Interesting)
Not to mention that it would seem that it would be in their best interests to get the word out to minimize losses.
Oh, they've already got that covered:
In other words, "Yeah, technically it was a breach, but you know, not enough data got released for us to actually be provably liable. So if your CC gets raped, you know, it's not our fault. Really. Trust us. ;)"
In related news, now we know what happened to the Iraqi Information Minister: He changed his name and became President and CFO of a large credit card payment processing company.
Re:WTF??? (Score:5, Interesting)
The first instinct of Heartland is to save itself and the first instinct of the banks will be that it can rate jack its customers if the new activity has put them overlimit.
Only after leaking of the news is inevitable and can no longer be delayed will Heartland grudgingly try to sneak it out under the radar and then in a general, untargeted sense, not directly to the customers involved. Nothing will be done to avoid spreading the pain to a card holder or to a vendor.
I dare say most of the legal wrangling was in how to spin this as a justification to claim from TARP.
Re:WTF??? (Score:5, Interesting)
Well, somebody who is inclined toward reality
No need to thank me.
Also, FTFA:
Heartland called U.S. Secret Service and hired two breach forensics teams to investigate. But Baldwin said it wasn't until last week that investigators uncovered the source of the breach...
Meaning they knew about it long enough to hire some forensics teams, do the research, figure out where the breach came from, etc. and they finished all that up last week...and then decided to wait until NOON today to release the news to the public? Sorry, but that's plain bullshit, no cynicism involved. If they were interested in disclosure, they would've released the news sooner. At the very latest, they would've released it as soon as they found out how it happened (so they could say they had already closed the breach.)
Instead, they wait until noon (they're a New Jersey company) when the inauguration is happening? Why not sooner in the day? Why wait until what would arguably be lunch time usually? Who discloses breaches at lunch? Answer: nobody. On the other hand, who discloses breaches during a HUGE national (and arguably international) event? Answer: someone trying to hide something.
Again, I say inclined toward reality, not cynicism.
Re:WTF??? (Score:4, Interesting)
First in a long line of discoveries to come (Score:5, Interesting)
Those who claim to be perfect but never admit mistakes usually are covering up for massive mistakes.
And the missing million emails we know of are just the observable symptom, as are the transactions in this health data breach.
The old truisms of data security still apply:
1. It's usually insiders that provided or passed on information used to get access.
2. Those who cover up problems only create even larger problems, due to the system of trust.
3. You can stop 99 percent of attacks with reasonable security measures, but a determined attacker willing to use human intelligence methods will almost always get through the other 1 percent - the trick is knowing what measures will dissuade the 99 percent and implement those, and use reporting to discover the other 1 percent instead of measures that will be defeated anyway.
Re:WTF??? (Score:4, Interesting)