May 242013
 

Sarah N. Lynch reports:

 Institutional Shareholder Services has settled civil charges by U.S. regulators that an employee of the prominent proxy advisory firm shared nonpublic voting data in exchange for meals and concert tickets.

The Securities and Exchange Commission said on Thursday that ISS, a unit of MSCI Inc, will pay a $300,000 penalty and hire an independent compliance consultant.

[...]

The SEC alleged that, from 2007 through early 2012, an ISS employee provided a proxy solicitor, a firm that gathers shareholder votes, with nonpublic information revealing how more than 100 ISS clients were voting their proxy ballots.

[...]

A spokesperson for Georgeson, a proxy solicitation firm owned by Computershare Ltd, confirmed late on Thursday that its employees were involved in the matter, but declined to comment on details of the “ongoing SEC investigations” or the SEC’s case against ISS.

Read more on Fox Business News.

May 222013
 

Krister Rollins reports:

The Maine Attorney General’s office is issuing an alert for people who may have used an out-of-state service for buying tickets for shows and other forms of entertainment recently.

The service, Venidini (sic), Inc., has been hacked, exposing financial information for tens of thousands of customers.

Vendini sent a letter to Maine’s Attorney General about the breach. Vendini’s letter says that on March 29th, someone broke into a server that contains the names, addresses, email addresses, credit card numbers and credit card expiration dates of tens of thousands of people, 22,900 Mainers among them.

Read more on WCSH.  A statement on Vendini’s blog, posted yesterday, reads:

Statement from Vendini Regarding Unauthorized Entry into its Systems

We regret to inform you that on April 25, 2013, Vendini, Inc. detected an unauthorized intrusion into its systems. Vendini provides box-office and online ticketing services to hundreds of Vendini members, which include tour, casino, sports, arts, and entertainment venues and promoters across the U.S. and Canada. If you used a credit card to make a purchase for an event through Vendini’s services, then your personal information may have been involved in this incident. For more information, please contact us at the number provided at the end of this posting.

We are actively cooperating with federal law enforcement, and this posting was delayed specifically to support law enforcement’s investigation.

A full-scale, internal investigation is under way at Vendini with outside computer forensic and cyber security experts. Although our internal investigation is ongoing, we believe that in late March, a third-party criminal actor used hacking technologies to access our databases and may have accessed personal information, such as name, mailing address, email address, phone number, and credit card numbers and expiration dates that belong to our members’ consumer-patrons. It is important to note we do not collect credit card security access codes (e.g., CVV, CVV2, PINs), information that is typically needed to complete a credit card transaction. Consumer-patron usernames or passwords were not accessed by the intruder.

Upon discovering this intrusion, we engaged computer forensic and cyber security experts to commence an investigation. We implemented enhanced security measures designed to prevent a recurrence of this type of incident. We notified our merchant banks; and credit card companies have been alerted. To protect against the possibility fraud, we urge all of our members’ consumer-patrons to remain vigilant, to review credit card account statements and to monitor credit reports for any unauthorized activity. In addition:

• Do NOT respond to any requests for sensitive personal information in relation to this incident. Vendini will never request such information via email or telephone unless it is absolutely necessary to respond directly to a member or members’ consumer-patrons regarding how this incident may have impacted them.
• In order for consumer-patrons to protect against the possibility of unauthorized use of your credit card, we encourage you to regularly review your credit card account statements for any unauthorized activity.
• If any consumer-patron suspects that he or she may be a victim of fraud, we recommend immediately contacting local law enforcement, the State Attorney General’s offices and the Federal Trade Commission. We are making available a Resources Guide here for further information that may be of assistance.

Our business is built on our ability to provide trusted services to our members and their consumer-patrons. This trust is founded on data protection and privacy, which is our highest priority. We want to see those involved in this incident found and fully prosecuted.

Vendini took immediate steps to correct the problem and ensure the safety of patron information, and we will continue to provide all services without interruption. We are committed to protecting our members and their consumer-patrons. We will work diligently to maintain your trust and confidence in our company and services.

• If you are a consumer-patron, and you wish to learn more about this incident, please click here or contact us toll-free at 1-800-836-0473.

• If you are a Vendini member, please contact your member advocate, or contact us toll-free at 1(800) 901-7173.

Mark Tacchi, President and CEO
Ruth Lutes, VP Customer Success
Dave Loewith, VP Engineering and Operations

posted by Mark Tacchi Tuesday, May 21, 2013 @ 5:46 PM

May 222013
 

Jason Miller reports:

Tens of thousands of current and former Homeland Security Department employees are at risk of identity theft after officials discovered a vulnerability in the vendor’s system for processing background investigations.

All DHS employees working in the headquarters office, for the Customs and Border Protection and for the Immigration and Customs Enforcement components from 2009 to 2013 are the most affected, according to an internal notice sent to employees, which was obtained by Federal News Radio and confirmed by a DHS spokeswoman.

“As a result of this vulnerability, information including name, Social Security numbers (SSN) and date of birth (DOB), stored in the vendor’s database of background investigations was potentially accessible by an unauthorized user since July 2009,” the internal notice stated.

Read more on FederalNewsRadio.com

Related: DHS Notice

May 202013
 

More on the Lifeline breach involving TerraCom and its affiliate YourTel America:

Scripps Howard News Service has its report on the breach here, and has also published a companion piece with video of how they discovered the breach. As reported previously, Scripps reports that when notified of the leak, TerraCom had accused Scripps of accessing the records illegally.

At least two states are now investigating the breach.  According to Scripps:

The Indiana attorney general’s office, responding to Scripps’ reporting, has launched an investigation into the release of TerraCom applicants’ personal records. The Texas attorney general’s office is also making inquiries about the publicly posted information.

Indiana and Texas have the highest numbers of applicants potentially at risk — 17,419 and 10,799, respectively — a partial analysis of the records shows.

According to Scripps, personal information used to verify eligibility for the federally supported Lifeline program was not supposed to have been retained. If it turns out TerraCom was retaining the information, that’s a serious matter apart from the inadequate security that led to the leak.  And blaming the entity that discovers and reports the breach will likely backfire.

May 182013
 

I’ve blogged a number of times about how although law enforcement may uncover breaches or data theft, the victims often do not get notified in a timely fashion – if at all.  Here are just a few scenarios where no one may notify people whose data have been stolen:

  • Law enforcement discovers a handwritten list of hundreds of individuals’ names, dates of birth, and Social Security numbers
  • Paper records with sensitive information – sometimes including medical information – are discovered in a dumpster and traced back to a defunct business or practice.
  • Law enforcement investigates stolen information available for sale on an underground market.

When credit card information is involved, people are more likely to get notified, as law enforcement may send a list of numbers to AmEx, Discover, or other card issuers who then take steps to protect and notify the consumer.  But if there are no credit card numbers involved, it seems there are gaps in notification.

The recent controversy over the FERC/EDRM data set involving emails from Enron employees provides a useful example of the hole in our patchwork quilt on notification.  The data set, available publicly, contained unredacted PII – including Social Security numbers – on thousands of people.    

The data were originally gathered by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, and when the issue of redaction came up in court, the court was sensitive to the issue. But did FERC and their contractor do a thorough enough job in removing documents? It seems that they didn’t if there was so much PII left in the data set, even though FERC  and their contractor went through a number of reviews of the data set to delete personnel’s personal information that was not appropriate for public release, as detailed in in this document.  

The data set has been available for download for years, and many people knew that it contained PII.  Is this a situation that the individuals affected should have been informed about? As a privacy advocate, I would say, “definitely.” But who is responsible for notifying them? And even though EDRM and Nuix have released a newly washed data set, the other Enron email data set has not yet been re-released after new washing.  More importantly, even when it is released, copies of the older data sets remain on numerous people’s hard drives and are still available for download on the Internet. As a result, those whose PII were exposed are still at risk.

I would bet that FERC takes the position that it gave Enron and others an opportunity to have PII removed and therefore, they are not responsible for any notification. EDRM may take the position that they merely distribute/make available the government’s records, and therefore they are not responsible.

So is no one responsible or liable for exposing thousands of individuals’ SSN to cybercriminals? Is no one responsible for notifying individuals that their SSN and details have been available for download on the Internet for years, and have been downloaded by people all over the world? Is no one responsible for contacting every site that hosts the problematic data sets to ask them to remove them?

And if you believe that either FERC or EDRM are responsible and should be held accountable in terms of notification to individuals, what existing law(s) are you basing that on?

In the meantime, the buck seems to stop… nowhere.

May 182013
 

Now what? Is this another big merchant breach or one we already knew about? Thomas Geyer reports:

Police in Savanna, Ill., have received numerous reports of debit and credit card fraud from residents and called in the U.S. Secret Service for assistance.

Savanna Police Chief Michael Moon said  all of the banks and credit unions in Savanna have been affected, as well as some banks in other jurisdictions.