http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2010/feb/15/identify-theft-continues-keep-metros-electronic-cr/ By Abigail Goldman Las Vegas Sun Feb. 15, 2010 The fraud took 48 hours from start to finish - a credit card that was swiped at a high-end fashion retailer in Las Vegas one day was counterfeited and being used two days later, often in Greece, Turkey, Morocco, Germany or Spain. This is because when the salespeople weren't ringing up customers on the store computer, they were using it to check e-mail and kill time online. One quick click, and an employee downloaded a virus that logged keystrokes and captured credit-card information. Detectives from Metro's Electronic Crimes Unit eventually traced the security breach to Romania. Romanian coffee shops, actually, where free wireless networks meant anonymous hacking. The Metro detectives found the same ring had cracked into 78 stores across the United States. Of course, by that time, it was a Secret Service case, so detective Paul Ehlers doesn't know if the Romanian ring was ever taken down. Or if he does know, he won't say. What he will say, however, is this: "It goes on every day." Metro's Electronic Crimes Unit is seven detectives strong . two work on child-porn and exploitation cases, the other five work on everything else. That everything else ranges from the local and palpable (credit-card skimmers hidden in gas-station pay pumps) to the murky Internet intangible (international hackers who are time zones away, hidden behind strings of 1s and 0s.) And all of it is on the rise. [...] ________________________________________ Did a friend send you this? From now on, be the first to find out! Subscribe to InfoSec News http://www.infosecnews.orgReceived on Tue Feb 16 2010 - 22:19:56 PST
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