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Thieves Don Repair Uniforms To Install Card Swipe Skimmers
Written by Evan Schuman
August 21, 2008
A gang of data thieves in Ireland has well learned the lesson that the best place to hide is in plain sight. The group hit a large number of retailers throughout Ireland and grabbed more than 20,000 payment cards by placing skimmers on card-swipes by wearing what appeared to be maintenance uniforms and saying that they were performing bank repairs.
"The criminals have been going into shops claiming to be engineers working on the terminals," Una Dillon, head of card services at the Irish Payment Services Organization Staff was quoted as telling The Irish Examiner. "Staff are used to their bank officials coming to update terminals so unfortunately they have been able to do that."
Dillon said that police have taken possession of "a lot of the devices" along with closed-circuit video footage. "We have a list of all the card numbers that have been used. They have either been blocked or restrictions put on those cards," she said. "With the devices recovered, it may just be that the cards were only saved and the criminals did not have a chance to get hold of the card numbers."
Not so lucky were a group of some 16 restaurateurs in Louisiana and Mississippi, whose POS systems were hit in a wireless attack not dissimilar from ones that hit TJX, OfficeMax, Barnes & Noble, BJ's Wholesale Club and the Sports Authority.
The hungry hackers limited their attack to those 16 restaurants in those two states before trying to sell them for between $1 and $100 each, U.S. Secret Service Agent Sean Connor told the Associated Press.
Among all retailers, restaurants have the best reputation for having the weakest security, thereby attracting thieves looking for soft targets. |
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Evan Schuman is the former retail technology editor for eWEEK.com, PCMagazine, CIOInsight and retail reporter for RISNews and Consumer Goods Technology. Having covered IT issues for 21 years - and other stuff like legal affairs, politics, Wall Street and the environment for about eight years before that - Schuman is in a good position to gripe about technology trends and sometimes accidentally make a good point.
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Sears.com Melts Down On Black Friday, But Costco, Walmart, Saks and Kmart Have Issues, Too
Sears.com suffered the worst Web problems on Black Friday (Nov. 28), experiencing a series of complete site crashes for much of the day. Although no other major retailer came close, according to preliminary reports, many of the industry's largest merchants suffered site slowdowns or other Web problems, including Walmart, Kmart, Saks, Overstock, Amazon, Target, Kohl's, Costco and Buy.com.
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