E-commerce company Digital River exposed data belonging to almost 200,000
individuals after hackers executed a “highly unusual search command” against
its secured servers, according to a news report.

The breach came to light only after a 19-year-old New York man allegedly
tried to sell the purloined data for as much as $500,000, *The Minneapolis
Star-Tribune* reported Friday. After Eric Porat made repeated attempts to
persuade a company called Media Breakaway to buy the information, company
officials alerted their counterparts at Digital River, the paper reported,
citing court documents. A federal grand jury is investigating the matter
with help from the FBI.
  
<http://ad.uk.doubleclick.net/jump/reg.security.4159/front;tile=2;pos=top;dcove=d;sz=336x280;ord=TA1jj8CoAT8AACulKX0AAAIf?>

The data contained names, email addresses, websites, and unique
user-identification numbers for 198,398 individuals. It was originally
gathered by affiliated marketing companies using software offered by Digital
Rivers subsidiary Direct Response Technologies and stored on
password-protected servers.

It was stolen in late January using a “highly unusual” search command. The
report didn't elaborate.

Porat, who lives at home with his parents, allegedly claimed to offer the
data to the highest bidder. He told the CEO of Media Breakaway he obtained
it from a former Digital River consultant, who managed to siphon it off the
servers when security systems were taken down temporarily.
Orders filed under seal last month block Porat from selling, destroying,
altering, or distributing the data. Documents in the case were unsealed on
Wednesday, but court documents weren't available online at time of writing.

Regards
Sandeep Thakur

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"nforceit" group.
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/nforceit?hl=en-GB.

Reply via email to