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Hackers turn credit report websites against consumers

Posted on March 27, 2012 by Dissent

Bob Sullivan of MSNBC has a story about credit reports being for sale that may worry people with good credit ratings.  It begins:

The most important tool consumers have to fight against ID theft has been turned against them by hackers, msnbc.com has learned. Websites that offer consumers a chance to see their credit reports are being brazenly used by hackers to steal victims’ information.
The prices of the reports rise and fall depending on the credit score of the victim. For consumers with credit scores in the 750s, report data might fetch $80; reports from victims with scores in the low 600s sell for about half that, according to “for sale” pages viewed by msnbc.com.

[…]

The most troubling part of these markets however – many hosted in the .su domain, which stands for the now-defunct Soviet Union – is the ready availability of credit reports and the hackers’ bragging about how easy it is to infiltrate websites like AnnualCreditReport.com or CreditReport.com.

Read more on Red Tape.

 

Category: Breach IncidentsID TheftU.S.

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1 thought on “Hackers turn credit report websites against consumers”

  1. porn says:
    April 3, 2012 at 10:52 am

    That happened with porn websites also!

Comments are closed.

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