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UK: Lush website hack ‘exposes credit card details’

Posted on January 21, 2011 by Dissent

John Leyden writes:

Luxury cosmetics firm Lush has ditched its UK website in response to a sustained hacking attack which left users vulnerable to credit card fraud.

The firm warns that credit card details submitted to the Lush.co.uk site between 4 October and 20 January may have been compromised by the assault by unknown hackers. Customers are advised to contact their bank as a precaution.

Lush wrote to its customers about the problem via email, copies of which were forwarded to us by several Reg readers. One reader reports that the credit card of a friend who had bought goods from Lush was subsequently used in a failed attempt to fraudulently purchase electrical goods online, anecdotal evidence that suggests the risk of fraud arising from this breach is far from theoretical.

Read more in The Register.


Related:

  • Commentary: Repeated insider breaches at TD Bank should trigger federal regulator investigation (update 1)
  • (update) Lush Looks For Answers In Security Breach That Could Cost Customers Thousands
  • "I'm Not Pro-Russia and I'm Not a Terrorist!" —- InfraGard and Airbus Hacker “USDoD” Unveils His New Campaigns
  • Umbreon Unplugged: Unraveling the Sequel to Failures
  • Lush web sites in AU and NZ also hacked
Category: Breach IncidentsBusiness SectorHackID TheftNon-U.S.

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