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Digital Banking Site 'Dave' Admits Security Breach Impacting 7.5 Million Users (zdnet.com) 21

"Digital banking app and tech unicorn Dave.com confirmed today a security breach," reports ZDNet, "after a hacker published the details of 7,516,625 users on a public forum." In an email to ZDNet today, Dave said the security breach originated on the network of a former business partner, Waydev, an analytics platform used by engineering teams... The company said it has already plugged the hacker's point of entry and is in the process of notifying customers of the incident. Dave app passwords are also being reset after being exposed.

"As soon as Dave became aware of this incident, the company immediately initiated an investigation, which is ongoing, and is coordinating with law enforcement, including with the FBI around claims by a malicious party that it has 'cracked' some of these passwords and is attempting to sell Dave customer data," Dave said. The company also brought in cyber-security firm CrowdStrike to assist the investigation...

The data includes a wealth of information, such as real names, phone numbers, emails, birth dates, and home addresses.

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Digital Banking Site 'Dave' Admits Security Breach Impacting 7.5 Million Users

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    This is one of those "banks" for the dimwitted payday loan users.

  • Dave! (Score:5, Funny)

    by Local ID10T ( 790134 ) <ID10T.L.USER@gmail.com> on Sunday July 26, 2020 @07:44PM (#60334463) Homepage

    Dave's not here man...

  • by R3d M3rcury ( 871886 ) on Sunday July 26, 2020 @07:44PM (#60334465) Journal

    And where was Dave when all of this happened?

  • With 7.5 million users the company is valued at over a billion dollars? I've never heard of this site, so maybe. But why?

    • Apparently, it targets lower-income individuals. So, it's not worth a ton because it caters to 7.5 million millionaires (which would make that valuation credible). So did they just self-proclaim they were worth 1 billion dollars or did they actually have a finance round that valued them as such?

      • I may be valued a a billion so that the current shareholders can foist their shares onto the next sucker who happens past.
        Sort of like the Uber plan (except I don't think that one is going to work out).
    • Never heard of them, either. Apparently, there's a market for folks who need a bank, but never go into a local branch to do actual banking type things (such as depositing cash). This little bullet point on their site has suddenly become hilarious, though:

      Security stronger than a bear

      Every account is protected by banking-level security and FDIC-insured up to $250,000.

      If their security is a bear, it must have met its Davy Crockett...

      • Re:Unicorn? (Score:4, Insightful)

        by hai_Priesty ( 1989268 ) on Sunday July 26, 2020 @10:34PM (#60334797)

        Security stronger than a bear

        The language used is hilariously unsophisticated because their targets lower income groups which has a large overlap with financial illiteracy (maybe general reading level too)....... and which is surprisingly profitable segment.

        I'd struggle to find ways a regular bank can successfully extract 2% of your take home pay from money you already have in traditional banking, but apparently a Cheque cashing fee of over 2% is quite a thing in 24 hours Check-Cashing Outlets of many American states. If a lower-middle class employee cashes their salaries like the Unbanked does, that would have been like $90 / mth - , a sum that's higher than their cable bills or 3 dinners out per month as a couple. The poor just pays more and is way more profitable as customers, willingly or unwillingly.

        Dave's business is probably horrendously run but their business plan (and pandering to the unsophisticated) likely make good business sense.

  • This is a service that offers nothing unusual and can't secure their front door and yet have 7.5 MILLION users.

    This is not a "tech unicorn", it's just another poser. Feel free to look it up.

    "We brung in some security firm. Didn't think to set one up ahead of time. D'Oy."
    Good riddance.

    E

  • ... make sure to give all of my personal information, including banking information, social security number, my real name address, and phone number to random websites. After all, information wants to be free!

    Seriously, anybody who uses some third party product to access their bank accounts has got to have a screw loose.

    I access my banking information in exactly one place online: my bank (credit union)'s web site.
    • Re:I always... (Score:4, Informative)

      by freeze128 ( 544774 ) on Sunday July 26, 2020 @10:23PM (#60334781)
      It's not a "random" website... The television ads show people saying "I got $75 from Dave". They make it sound like Dave is giving out free money! It's a LOAN, and any place you get a loan, you have to give personal and financial information.
  • by jfdavis668 ( 1414919 ) on Sunday July 26, 2020 @10:10PM (#60334765)
    I'm afraid I can't do that.
  • Hello Dave! You're my wife now!

    (look it up, some of BBC's finest comedy that series)

  • Is that the one opposite Karen's Pawn?

  • I'm glad the FBI is investigating why Dave.com can't keep its customer's data safe. That's what they're doing, right?

"The vast majority of successful major crimes against property are perpetrated by individuals abusing positions of trust." -- Lawrence Dalzell

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