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posted by n1 on Thursday August 21 2014, @05:22PM   Printer-friendly
from the data-breaches,-faster-than-the-speed-of-business dept.

Ars Technica reports:

Dozens of UPS stores across 24 states, including California, Georgia, New York, and Nebraska, have been hit by malware designed to suck up credit card details. The UPS Store, Inc., is a subsidiary of UPS, but each store is independently owned and operated as a licensed franchisee.

In an announcement posted Wednesday to its website, UPS said that 51 locations, or around one percent of its 4,470 franchised stores across the country, were found to have been penetrated by a “broad-based malware intrusion.” The company recorded approximately 105,000 transactions at those locations, but does not know the precise number of cardholders affected.

UPS did not say precisely how such data was taken, but given the recent breaches at hundreds of supermarkets nationwide, point-of-sale hacks at Target, and other major retailers, such systems would be a likely attack vector. Earlier this month, a Wisconsin-based security firm also reported that 1.2 billion usernames and passwords had been captured by a Russian criminal group.

 
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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 22 2014, @12:04AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 22 2014, @12:04AM (#84152)

    > Only if people are retarded enough to tell them their online password,

    Don't be that guy.

    Even the people suspicious enough not to hand out passwords won't necessarily balk at things like answers to "secret questions" that will let the hackers into their email accounts and thus able to request a password reset.

    Personal information can be exploited in all kinds of ways your lack of imagination doesn't stop the people looking to get rich.