Wednesday, September 17, 2014

FBI Cyber Crime Stories Week 4

No security plan is ever 100% secure. I believe that as more companies begin to understand this, they will begin to employ other checkpoints to detect unusual activity, etc. Just last week my credit card was compromised. I was alerted when I received an email from Capital One, listing show unusual activity on my credit card. Thankfully Capital One was able to quickly cancel the credit card to prevent further fraud, and issue a replacement to me.
Two weeks ago Home Depot launched an investigation after it was alerted that its customers’ credit and debit card information was stolen and was on sale in the cybercrime underground. Possible attackers were a group of Russian and Ukraine hackers. There was a possibility that customers’ data was stolen from almost all the Home Depot stores in the United States. The amazing thing is that even a formal, thorough investigation into a possible data breach often does not reveal conclusive information! We must adopt chip-reading technology and other latest security measures to prevent these breaches. Companies cannot afford to be lax; they stand to lose too much in revenue, brand reputation, etc.

http://www.theguardian.com/business/2014/sep/03/home-depot-customer-data-breach-all-stores-security

1 comment:

  1. ...and this case follows the format of all the other companies whose security was breached - first denial, followed by we're investigating, then finally admittance! Home Deport has confirmed a data breach took place, potentially impacting their customers using payment cards at its U.S. and Canadian stores.
    Companies need to be more invested in their security. Home Depot joins a growing list of retailers who experienced security breaches. The recent Target breach should have been a serious warning for these major retailers like Home Depot and others. Let's see if others will learn from this breach.

    http://www.bna.com/attorneys-general-launch-n17179894898/

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