Targeted attacks represent the biggest IT security threat to companies
Criminals do not even need to hack into corporate systems to steal information
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Hackers up the ante with targeted attacks

Gartner analyst paints gloomy picture

Will Head at the Gartner IT Security Summit in London, vnunet.com 18 Sep 2006
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Targeted attacks represent the biggest IT security threat to companies, a senior Gartner analyst warned today. 

Vic Wheatman, managing vice president for Gartner US, told vnunet.com at the Gartner IT Security Summit in London that criminals are going after databases of customer names, addresses and dates of birth and then selling them on the open market. 

Cyber-crime has become so sophisticated that criminals do not even need to hack into corporate systems to steal information, according to Wheatman.

"The bad guys have got so smart they are able to sell valid credit card numbers and the authentication numbers before the credit card companies actually issue those numbers," he said.

"There is an algorithm associated with the validation number so you can sort of guess what the credit card number's going to be by looking at the credit card. American Express would be 3714 [for example].

"Then there is an algorithm associated with the rest of the number that becomes the validation number."

Identity theft is also becoming a big issue, although Wheatman warned that the level of reported incidents may not reflect the true numbers.

"There has been a lot of identity theft, or potential identify theft. Some people think they've been affected and maybe they were. They see something going on, but a lot of times they're wrong," he said.

"They see an account that they don't recognise but it may just be they did business with someone and they're using a different name to process the credit cards. But certainly there's been a lot of identity theft. It's become a big issue."

See also:

Antivirus firm SoftScan said this week that spam now accounts for 87.72 per cent of all emailPercentage of phishing emails increases dramatically  04 Sep 2006
Phishing attacks will use more sophisticated social engineering, targeting consumers for financial and identity theft and businesses for intellectual property theftHighly sophisticated email scams on the way  01 Sep 2006
Technology provided by Kaspersky  09 Aug 2006
Appeal shows ‘desperate technical ineptness’, warns security expert  03 Aug 2006
Users of eBay and PayPal are the target of more than 75 per cent of all phishing emailsWeb giants' popularity encourages fraudsters, says Sophos  28 Jul 2006
Panda Software launched a campaign this week designed to help surfers recognise and defend against phishing scamsSecurity firm offers 10 Tips to Combat Phishing  23 May 2006
The Russian interior minister has called for the world to take a united stand against online criminalsInternet crime as deadly as weapons of mass destruction, says Russia's interior minister  20 Apr 2006

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