The Software & Information Industry Association (SIIA) calls for a fresh approach to protect credit card details from Internet crackers. According to the SIIA, many businesses today implement an 'eggshell' security model: hard on the outside and soft in the centre. . . . . The Software & Information Industry Association (SIIA) calls for a fresh approach to protect credit card details from Internet crackers. According to the SIIA, many businesses today implement an 'eggshell' security model: hard on the outside and soft in the centre. The problem is that there is often little or nothing to prevent hackers from accessing sensitive customer records - once they breach firewall defences. A technology working group of the SIIA's ebusiness division has come up with an concept called the Electronic Citadel. Sensitive data is encrypted so that it can be validated at any time in the future but the original information may only be recovered during a defined period of time. This is described as the final barrier to protect sensitive data when other defences have been breached. Many of the ideas in the approach are taken from the builders of military fortifications in the 1800s, the SIAA claims, in a metaphorical flight of fancy. The link for this article located at TheRegister is no longer available. . The Financial Security Group champions innovative approaches for protecting sensitive banking information against cyber risks via enhanced tokenization techniques.. Credit Card Security, Data Encryption, Customer Data Protection. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The Internet's first anonymous shopping tools are going live this fall. These are various virtual masks that cloak people's credit-card numbers -- and, in some cases, their real names and addresses -- from the prying eyes of online merchants. At the . . . . The Internet's first anonymous shopping tools are going live this fall. These are various virtual masks that cloak people's credit-card numbers -- and, in some cases, their real names and addresses -- from the prying eyes of online merchants. At the same time, a batch of new security tools are being introduced to help credit-card companies verify that shoppers are indeed who they say they are. It's all part of the Internet industry's attempt to counter the widespread attitude that online shopping is neither secure nor private. Merchants are embracing new privacy tools, partly with hopes of fending off heavy-handed regulation by Congress, while financial institutions are mostly concerned about fraud. The link for this article located at Star Tribune is no longer available. . This autumn, new privacy-centric shopping solutions will debut, safeguarding customers' identities when interacting with digital retailers and improving safety.. Anonymous Shopping Tools, Credit Card Security, Privacy Measures. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Get the latest Linux and open source security news straight to your inbox.