Visa and MasterCard are investigating whether a data security breach
at one of the main companies that processes transactions improperly
exposed private customer information, bank officials said Friday. The
event highlighted a crucial vulnerability that could affect millions of
cardholders.
The breach occurred at Global Payments, an Atlanta
company that helps Visa and MasterCard process transactions for
merchants. One bank executive estimated that about 1 million to 3
million accounts could be affected. That does not mean all those cards
were used fraudulently, but that credit card information on the
cardholders was exposed.
The bank official, who insisted on
anonymity because the inquiry is at an early stage, said that Visa and
MasterCard notified his company Thursday, but that banks had been
frustrated with the pace of disclosure by Global Payments. He said that
Global Payments, which is one of the biggest transactions processors,
had provided little information on where the breaches took place, how
accounts were hacked and other details that could indicate which
customers might be vulnerable.
Banks said that when they could identify victims, they would notify them and replace credit cards, if necessary.
Bank
officials said they were told by Visa and MasterCard that the breach
occurred sometime from late January to late February, and included what
is known as Track 1 and Track 2 data. That includes details like names,
card numbers, validation codes and in some cases, customer addresses.
“Thieves
are after high concentrations of credit card numbers, which makes
payment processors the perfect target,” said Tim Matthews, a director at
Symantec, a security firm.
The processors, including Global
Payments, act as the plumbing from merchants to banks, authorizing
millions of transactions each day.
With each swipe of a credit
card, the card number and other important financial information travels
from the merchant to the third-party processors and then to Visa or
MasterCard. The data is then forwarded to the bank that issued the card.
The
holy grail for hackers is the account information. The goal is to break
the data’s encryption as it travels through the payment processor
system, said Avivah Litan, a vice president and analyst with Gartner
Research, a security firm.
This is the second breach at Global
Payments in the past 12 months, according to two individuals briefed on
the investigations who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they
were not authorized to speak publicly. Another similar attack was
disclosed by Heartland Payment Systems in 2009, a breach that began in
2007 and resulted in the exposure of data on 130 million credit cards.
Heartland estimated that breach cost it $140 million in fines,
settlements and legal fees.
The new possible breach was reported
Friday morning by a blog called Krebs on Security. Trading in Global
Payments shares was halted around noon but the share price had already
dropped 9.1 percent to $47.50.
A spokeswoman for Global Payments
declined to comment on whether hackers had struck before. In a statement
Friday afternoon, the company said it had identified “unauthorized
access into a portion of its processing system,” and had asked for help
from external experts in computer security and also contacted federal
law enforcement. The Secret Service, which investigates credit card
fraud, confirmed that it was looking into the breach.
“It is
reassuring that our security processes detected an intrusion,” said Paul
Garcia, the chief executive of Global Payments. “It is crucial to
understand that this incident does not involve our merchants or their
relationships with their customers.”
Electronic payment industry
officials also said the latest data thefts were not evidence of a larger
problem. “These folks work night and day to secure their systems, but
they are connected to millions of merchants around the country and
nothing is absolutely foolproof,” said Thomas Goldsmith, a spokesman for
the Electronic Transactions Association, a trade group.
MasterCard
would not say how many cardholders might have been affected by the
attack. The card companies also said they had alerted banks and law
enforcement officials to the breach, and emphasized that their own
systems had not been compromised.
“We have alerted payment card
issuers regarding certain MasterCard accounts that are potentially at
risk,” MasterCard said in a statement. A Visa representative said that
“there has been no breach of Visa systems.”
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