Hacker Finds a New Home for Stolen Cards

Published: 19 March 2000 y., Sunday
The cracker, who has been posting thousands of stolen credit cards at a succession of personal web sites for the past six weeks, opened up shop Friday at a new location. Curador, who calls himself "the custodian of ecommerce," claims to have stolen over 23,000 credit cards from eight small sites over the past six weeks. After each hit, he_s posted several hundred additional card numbers and customer names and addresses online in what he calls his "Hall of Shame." And each time he pops up online with a new site, Web hosting firms and domain registrars have responded by shutting it down. Curador has said he uses stolen credit cards to pay for the domain registrations. Who-is records from Network Solutions_ WorldNic registration service reveal that Curador_s new site is registered to Fibres Solutions of Swansea, Wales. No valid phone or e-mail contact information was provided. Although Curador claims to have cracked some new sites, he has not yet published their names or posted any card numbers or other customer records obtained from them. Spokesperson Chris Clough said NSI is investigating the incident, but the registration firm has no way of preventing such occurrences. Clough added that the proposed acquisition of Network Solutions by digital certificate firm Verisign could result in new authentication services that could prevent such fraudulent registrations. According to a source close to the investigation, law enforcement officials are still gathering and analyzing evidence against Curador, including log files from his previous victims. While Curador registers personal sites to get attention for his exploits and to taunt law enforcement officials, that isn_t the modus operandi of a cracker who reportedly stole half a million credit cards from an online retailer last year.
Šaltinis: InternetNews.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

What impact will sites like Facebook and YouTube have in the EP elections?

Networking sites like Facebook and YouTube are changing politics. more »

Santander Selects Wincor Nixdorf for its ATMs

Vendor to service almost 4,000 existing ATMs and supply another 450. more »

WINCOR: Check 21, deposit automation will revolutionize the branch

The advent of deposit automation, facilitated in many ways by the implementation of Check 21, is not only improving check-handling processes at the self-service terminal – it also is improving handling within the bank branch itself. more »

Moroccan Post Office chooses Bull

The Moroccan Post Office, Barid Al-Maghrib, has selected Bull to act as project manager on the automation project for its International Mail Center in Casablanca. more »

Gemalto Wins Austin Business Journal Tech Innovation Award

Gemalto has taken home one of the most coveted technology prizes in Austin with its Smart Enterprise Guardian (SEG). more »

So-called 'bam-raids' on Aussie ATMs get bankers' attention

Banks in Australia are rushing to install gas detectors into their ATMs, as gas-explosive attacks on ATMs in the country continue to climb. more »

EMC and Microsoft Extend Strategic Alliance Through 2011

EMC CEO Joe Tucci and Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer showcase deep technology collaboration at New York CIO Summit. more »

Gemalto and mChek Join Forces to Serve Mobile Payment Markets in South Asia

India-based mChek looks to offer its secured SIM-card-based mobile applications through partnership with Gemalto. more »

Heartland Payments CEO says end-to-end encryption could prevent card, data breaches

Nearly one week after news emerged of the big data breach at Princeton, N.J.-based merchant acquirer Heartland Payment Systems Inc., it remains unclear how much damage actually happened and who did it. more »

Wincor Nixdorf launches new ATM tech that shields ATMs from attacks

Wincor Nixdorf AG has announced the release of an enhanced security product for bank branches called ProTect. more »