On Jan. 23rd News Factor.com reported that Heartland Payment Systems Inc., through some put in place malcode, 100M credit card permanent account numbers may have been compromised. The last public announcement from Heartland was that they did not know when the malcode might have been put in place.
Back in December I wrote about 21 Million German Bank Account for sale correlated with other customer information, and at the time, I thought this was a interesting feat to accumulate 21 million bank account numbers associated with other personal information. But then with the MS08-67 vulnerability followed by Botnet worms that reported infecting over 8 million PC's, I am beginning to think that it is probably very doable to obtain other personal information
A few years ago when monitoring the traffic on a German ISP networks for a firewall implementation, I remember being amazed at the number of hits per/second from other users infected with some sort of malware right within the same ISP's address range -- and that it was just taken as a matter of fact attitide - nothing could be done. It's the same in the US if your infected with something. It is your own individual problem and possibly a family issue on the usability of network computer resources and computing policies.
I'm not blaming the MS08-67 Vulnerability for all this trouble as this has been going on for a very long time - if it's not Microsoft Worms, it's Macintosh Worms, then it's Unix Worms. It's just that there are a lot of really frightening people out there who realized years ago that connecting billions of people together instantaneously in a medium that they really did not understand the basic fundamentals of, offered them the greatest opportunity ever for non-violent crime. Where else could you get a captive audience of billions of people besides Television or the Radio which was not interactive?
The bottom line is it's all software. Whether it is the code that runs the nation's infrastructure, stores all of your bank account information, your retirement plan, keeping track of how much milk you buy at the grocery store or managing the telephone connections or conversations, there is a commonality within all of it that goes through and below Application and Operating System layers. Despite all the ways that we come up with to mitigate risks to the exposure of this commonality we still seem to fail at it. This is not only a concern from the perspective of individual loss but is a concern of governments on the security and stability of its infrastructure.
Just as a side note that the release of this largest Data Breach of Permanent Account numbers was released on Inauguration Day.
People generally don't like Risk Assessments they think that it is the reason that decisions are made based on dark thoughts.




