Chatrooms used for sharing hints and tips in growing business of ID theft
Published:
26 July 2003 y., Saturday
Thieves are using chat rooms to sell stolen credit card details and advise others how to hack websites containing credit information, security experts have warned.
Groups using internet relay chat (IRC) are playing a growing role in online credit card fraud.
A report by the Honeynet Project, which monitors criminal activity on the internet, shows that online thieves are becoming increasingly sophisticated. The credit card details are not only used to purchase products but to clone the card owner's identity.
In order to monitor and record this activity, the Honeynet researchers set up computer systems, called 'honeynets' or 'honeypots', intended to be easy targets for hackers. The researchers then tracked the hackers to the IRC channels.
Dr Bill McCarty and his students at Azusa Pacific University monitored activities on more than a dozen IRC channels relating to credit card fraud after a hacker infiltrated one of their traps.
He warned that such criminal activity is not confined to the US. "We saw people from the UK in these rooms trading information," he told vnunet.com.
The software programs used in these rooms can systematically search out vulnerable websites containing credit information, determine which bank issued a card, harvest the three-digit card verification number and even let thieves determine the available credit card limit.
They can check a card number's validity and personal information about its owner.
In one IRC chat group a user was selling credit card numbers for 50 cents to $1 each, while another wanted lessons on cracking online sites containing credit card information.
But this is only the tip of the iceberg of the growing problem of identity theft, the cost of which runs into millions every year.
Over the past year in the US at least seven million people have fallen victim to identity theft of some sort, according to a survey by analyst Gartner.
A report from the UK Fraud Advisory Panel said that the number of identity thefts in the UK has grown from 27,270 in 2001 to 42,029 last year, costing victims an estimated £62.5m annually and the UK economy £1.3bn a year.
Šaltinis:
vnunet.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
Internet cafe users in China have long been subject to an extraordinary range of controls
more »
Internet cafe users in China have long been subject to an extraordinary range of controls
more »
The European Commission said Sunday that it would not enforce a Monday deadline for Microsoft to start selling a modified version of its Windows operating system in Europe
more »
The woman who launched the controversy over electronic voting machines has formed a nonprofit consumer group that plans to investigate election officials
more »
The Chinese government is calling on Internet service providers to sign a "self-discipline pact" meant to stop the spread of information that could harm national security as defined by Beijing
more »
search.lt presents newest links
more »
The Royal Courts of Justice and six other courts around the UK have been kitted out with wireless Internet "hotspots" as part of measures to help modernise the legal system
more »
Intel on Thursday will offer an early look at its latest chipsets at a pair of events in New York and San Francisco
more »
Some useful citizen has written a virus which targets mobile phones running the Symbian operating system
more »
On
the 25-27 of May for the first time in Lithuania “Competitions of the Robots”
for the students of universities and engineers from different countries took
place in the Lithuanian Exhibition
Centre “Litexpo”. More >>>
more »