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Internet fraudsters are selling the credit card details of hundreds of Britons
each night by hacking into companies’ computer systems.
The gangs, thought to operate out of Eastern Europe and South-East Asia, break
through firewalls and steal information such as card numbers, security
codes, PINs, street and e-mail addresses and mobile phone numbers.
The Times has tracked them to “Internet Relay Chatrooms”, where they
trade what they have stolen.
An American company that monitors such chatrooms said that it was aware of the
details of 300 to 400 British customers each day, although that estimate was
conservative because it could not keep track of the whole trade. “We monitor
hundreds of rooms but we don’t see all the operators. These people go from
one forum to another. It’s a growing problem,” Dan Clements, the head of
Card Cops, said.
The hackers, mainly young men, keep no record of their conversations, although
police are investigating whether the payment system they often use, known as
E-Gold, may enable their transactions to be traced.
One of the most common techniques is known as “SQL injection”, whereby a
criminal accesses a database via a webpage set up by a company to interact
with its customers. A typical example is a “feedback” page, on which a
customer fills out various fields and clicks “submit” rather than sending an
e-mail.
“By inputting the right commands into those fields, a hacker can get the
system to feed him back confidential information,” said Alan Phillips, the
managing director of 7Safe, an information security consultancy that
conducts “mock hacks” on the systems of government and big corporations to
test security.
Another method involves accessing a computer system through the part that
hosts its website, known as ‘Port 80’. “Port 80 is always open and if a
hacker gains entry through it there’s the potential to get control of a
different machine and penetrate farther,” Mr Phillips said. “It’s like using
stepping-stones to get across a river.”
About half of company computer systems are so insecure as to enable a hacker
to gain administrator rights, Mr Phillips said. Most companies are unaware
that their server has been preyed upon.
“It’s really frightening,” said Jayne Mitchell, 47, who bought an adaptor and
insect repellent from the site called www.travelwithcare.com before a trip
to India and was later told by her bank that two fraudulent transactions
totalling £950 had been attempted with her card. “I use the internet for
everything, and other than trying to stick to names I know, I don’t take any
precautions,” Mrs Mitchell, a property consultant from Stamford,
Lincolnshire, said.
()Toni Norris, the director of Homeway/Travelwithcare, said: “We can find no
evidence that our system was hacked into but will investigate every avenue
and are looking at ways of improving our system, including having a
specialised company manage our payments. We are reassuring customers that we
are in no way connected with the fraud, and are taking all available
precautions in ensuring their details are kept safe.”
All the victims of the two companies contacted by The Times — some lost
as much as £1,000 — were reimbursed by their banks, but the theft of such
personal information raises the prospect of long-term identity fraud, which
can take more than a year to trickle back to a victim because of the time
fraudsters spend building trust with unsuspecting lenders.
“Card-not-present” fraud — where a stolen number is used to make a payment
over the phone or internet — was the only type of card fraud to rise last
year, increasing by 21 per cent to £183 million.
Campaigners say that companies should be legally obliged to give customers
more protection. As long as the bank is seen as the victim, they argue, the
customer will be without remedy beyond recovering immediate losses from
their account.
Under the Data Protection Act, companies that hold personal information about
customers have to use “appropriate security” to prevent harm resulting from
its loss, but there is no specific obligation to inform customers about a
potential breach of security.
INTERNET CHATROOM PRICE LIST
Regular credit card number: $1
Credit card with 3-digit security code: $3-$5
Credit card with code and PIN: $10-$100
Social security number (US): $5-$10
Mother’s maiden name: $5-$10
THE BIG NUMBERS
£56.4 billion: total amount owing on British credit
cards
141.1 million: number of credit, debit and charge cards in
Britain
1.9 billion: number of purchases on credit and charge cards
in Britain a year
£123 billion: total value of credit and charge card
purchases a year 5 number of credit, debit and charge cards held by 1 in 10
consumers
£58 average value of a purchase on a credit card
£41 average value of a debit card purchase
88% of applicants have been issued with a credit card without
providing proof of income
£504.8 million: total plastic card fraud losses on
British cards a year
£1.3 million: amount of fraud committed against cards
each day 7 number of seconds between instances of fraud
£696 average size of fraud, 2004
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