An online gift certificate company said a hacker that blackmailed it for weeks after pilfering its customer information has apparently carried out threats of disclosing the data to its customers. Webcertificate.com customers reported getting an e-mail message that included their home and e-mail addresses.. . .. An online gift certificate company said a hacker that blackmailed it for weeks after pilfering its customer information has apparently carried out threats of disclosing the data to its customers. Webcertificate.com customers reported getting an e-mail message that included their home and e-mail addresses. "I hate to inform you that your account has been hacked," said the e-mail, viewed by this reporter, from someone identified as Zilterio. Webcertificate, a unit of electronic-payment company Ecount, was hacked Aug. 21, a representative said. Shortly afterward, the hacker, who also claimed to have stolen credit card numbers of 350,000 of the company's customers, contacted Philadelphia-based Ecount and tried to extort the company, said Matt Gillin, Ecount's chief executive. The caller demanded $45,000 in exchange for not disclosing the information. The company refused to meet the demands, Gillin said. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . An online gift certificate company said a hacker that blackmailed it for weeks after pilfering its c. online, certificate, company, hacker, blackmailed, weeks, pilfering. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
A freelance Internet security expert said he found a potential cybernightmare in online broker E-Trade Group's Internet operations -- a programming flaw that could have given hackers easy access to customer accounts.. . .. A freelance Internet security expert said he found a potential cybernightmare in online broker E-Trade Group's Internet operations -- a programming flaw that could have given hackers easy access to customer accounts. Jeffrey Baker, a San Francisco computer programmer who hunts for Internet security problems in his spare time, claimed malicious computer jockeys could get a customer's user name and password simply by stealing a ``cookie.' Those are hidden files that Web sites place on visitors' computers that are used to track return visits. The link for this article located at SF Gate is no longer available. . An independent cybersecurity specialist uncovered a significant vulnerability in E-Trade that might enable cybercriminals to infiltrate user accounts.. E-Trade Security Concern, Cyber Threat Issues, Online Brokerage Risks. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Get the latest Linux and open source security news straight to your inbox.