Showing posts with label Cards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cards. Show all posts

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Venezuelan government orders ‘ration cards’ amid food shortages

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Venezuelan government orders ‘ration cards’ amid food shortages

Sunday, March 30, 2014

World Peace Through Equal Redistribution of Race Cards

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World Peace Through Equal Redistribution of Race Cards

Thursday, December 19, 2013

Target cyber breach hits 40 million payment cards at holiday peak

Target cyber breach hits 40 million payment cards at holiday peak
http://s1.reutersmedia.net/resources/r/?m=02&d=20131219&t=2&i=822644798&w=580&fh=&fw=&ll=&pl=&r=CBRE9BI0WZN00





BOSTON Thu Dec 19, 2013 7:06pm EST



Merchandise baskets are lined up outside a Target department store in Palm Coast, Florida, December 9, 2013. REUTERS/Larry Downing

Merchandise baskets are lined up outside a Target department store in Palm Coast, Florida, December 9, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Larry Downing




BOSTON (Reuters) – Target Corp said hackers have stolen data from up to 40 million credit and debit cards of shoppers who visited its stores during the first three weeks of the holiday season in the second-largest such breach reported by a U.S. retailer.


The hackers worked at unprecedented speed, carrying out their operation from the day before Thanksgiving to this past Sunday, 19 days that are the heart of the crucial Christmas holiday sales season.


Target, the third-largest U.S. retailer, said on Thursday that it was working with federal law enforcement and outside experts to prevent similar attacks in the future. It did not disclose how its systems were compromised.


Target did not detect the attack on its own, according to a person familiar with the investigation.


The retailer was alerted its systems might have been compromised by credit card processors who had noticed a surge in fraudulent transactions involving credit cards that had been used at Target, according to the source, who was not authorized to discuss the matter.


The timing of the breach could not have been worse for Target, coming just before three of the four busiest days of what has been a bruising holiday season for retailers, with the highest level of discounting in years. Target itself last month lowered its profit forecast for the year after disappointing sales in the third quarter.


Complaints from customers began to surface on social media as they learned of it early Thursday morning.


“Most of these attacks are just a cost of doing business,” said Mark Rasch, a former U.S. prosecutor of cyber crimes.


“But an attack that’s targeted against a major retailer during the peak of the Christmas season is much more than that because it undermines confidence.”


Investigators are still trying to understand how the attack was carried out, including whether hackers found a weakness at Target’s own computer network or through credit card services vendors. It was not immediately clear what percent of the transactions at its brick and mortar stores had been compromised but the company said its online business had not been affected.


Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley, who headed a multi-state probe into a 2007 data breach at TJX Cos, said in a statement that her office was talking to Target about the breach and how the company is addressing it, and plans to work with other Attorneys General to determine whether the company had proper safeguards in place.


New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman said in a public statement that he had asked Target for more information as well. Lawyers said that there will almost definitely be class action suits against Target.


The affected payment cards include Target’s REDcard private label debit and credit cards as well as other bank cards, Target spokeswoman Molly Snyder told Reuters on Thursday. She declined to say if the incident was affecting store traffic.


The largest breach against a U.S. retailer, uncovered in 2007 at TJX Cos Inc, led to the theft of data from more than 90 million credit cards over about 18 months.


Since then, companies have gotten far more adept at identifying intruders. But criminals have responded by developing more-powerful attack strategies, spending months on reconnaissance to launch highly sophisticated schemes with the goal of extracting as much data as they can in the shortest period of time.


Representatives for J.C. Penney Co Inc, Wal-Mart Stores Inc, Best Buy Co Inc and Home Depot Inc told Reuters they believed their systems had not been compromised in similar attacks.


Target will provide more details on costs related to the issue at a later date, Snyder said. She declined comment when asked if Target expected potential fines from MasterCard, Visa and American Express or saw a possible increase in merchant fees.


“It’s so early in this investigation,” Snyder said.


Avivah Litan, a Gartner analyst who specializes in cyber-security and fraud detection, saw costs for Target. “They are going to pay for any fraud on the card,” she said. “They will get fined (by card issuers) for non-compliance with payment card security standards. Their merchant fee will probably go up a few basis points.”


Target’s shares closed down 2.2 percent at $ 62.15 on the New York Stock Exchange on Thursday afternoon, while the Standard & Poor’s 500 stock index fell 0.06 percent.


ANGRY CUSTOMERS


Target warned customers in an alert on its website that the criminals had stolen names, payment card numbers, expiration dates and security codes.


The company had identified the breach on Sunday and had begun responding to it the same day, Snyder said. She declined to explain why the retailer waited until Thursday to alert customers about the breach.


Krebs on Security, a closely watched security industry blog that broke the news on Wednesday, said the breach involved nearly all of Target’s 1,797 stores in the United States.


The U.S. Secret Service is working on the investigation, according to an agency spokeswoman. A Federal Bureau of Investigation spokeswoman declined to comment.


Unhappy customers began to weigh in early on Thursday, posting complaints on Target’s Facebook page.


“Thank you Target for nearly costing me and my wife our identities, we will never shop or purchase anything in your store again,” said one posting.


“Shop at Target, become a target,” remarked another. “Gee, thanks.”


Target’s Snyder said it has been getting an “extremely high” volume of calls from customers and is adding employees to its call centers to answer questions on security breach.


Krista Brewer, 27, a student at Bridgewater State University at Braintree, Massachusetts, sent Target an email and canceled her credit card on Thursday because she had used it multiple times in recent weeks at the store.


“If they don’t do anything for the customers who had their cards put at risk, such as coupons or a special deal, I think I will avoid shopping there in the future,” she said. “I’m very security conscious, and they aren’t saying exactly how the breech happened.”


JPMorgan Chase & Co, one of the biggest U.S. credit card issuers, said it was monitoring the accounts involved for suspicious activity and urged customers to contact the bank if they noticed any.


An American Express spokeswoman said the company was aware of the incident and was putting fraud controls in place.


Major card brands typically offer their cardholders zero liability and cardholders should contact their issuer if they spot suspicious transactions, a Visa spokesman said, adding that a breached account does not necessarily result in a fraudulent purchase.


“This could hurt the end of the holiday season if for no other reason than many of their customers have to cancel cards ahead of holidays,” said Janney Capital Markets analyst David Strasser.


The breach also comes at a time Target is trying to build its online business, which by some estimates is only 2 percent of sales.


“All consumers will hear is that Target is not a safe place to use your credit card. That impacts trust, which in turn can impact retail’s fastest-growing and most trust-sensitive touch points: online and mobile,” said Carol Spieckerman, president of retail strategy firm newmarketbuilders.


Still, consumers tend to have short memories with these things, so even if it is bad now, it will likely be less of an issue next quarter, said Gartner analyst Litan.


“(Consumers) care more about discounts than security,” she said.


(Additional reporting by Siddharth Cavale, David Henry, Marina Lopes, Phil Wahba and Peter Rudegeair; Editing by Kirti Pandey, Rodney Joyce, Lisa Von Ahn, Jilian Mincer, Peter Henderson, Phil Berlowitz and Bob Burgdorfer)






Reuters: Business News




Read more about Target cyber breach hits 40 million payment cards at holiday peak and other interesting subjects concerning Business at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Sunday, December 8, 2013

Go Ahead And Mail Your Boring Holiday Cards

Go Ahead And Mail Your Boring Holiday Cards
http://media.npr.org/assets/img/2013/12/08/simonsantasuperman-81f88cf20c73f49a2ff81bf7db2140d06363d499-s6-c30.jpg





After he and his son Simon encountered both Santa Claus and Superman in an ice cream parlor, NPR’s Alan Greenblatt sent out this holiday photo in 2010.



Courtesy Alan Greenblatt


It’s always chic to make fun of holiday letters. People can’t win, whether they earnestly recount their fellowship missions to poor countries (self-important), brag about European vacations (must be nice) or simply bore with accounts of school plays or travails in their gardens.


The habit of knocking holiday letters is now not just snark shared between friends, but has become an annual journalistic tradition.


Holiday letters can be “insufferable” and “deadly boring,” Laura Vanderkam complains in Fast Company. “There’s often a subtext of social competition,” according to Peggy Drexler in The Wall Street Journal. And those are in articles that defend the tradition.


“Dear friends and relatives, it’s not you — it’s your holiday cards. They’re ridiculous!” Eric Hoover tweeted Friday, promoting his Washington Post article on the subject.


In previous years, some have argued social media have made the whole idea of sending out holiday cards not just superfluous but annoyingly redundant.


“There’s little point to writing a Christmas update now,” Nina Burleigh wrote last year for Time. “The urge to share has already been well sated.”


The holiday card has indeed, like so much else, been forever altered and perhaps endangered by the Internet. What I don’t understand is the urge to dance on its grave.


Perfectly Posed


Hoover’s complaint is that too many photo cards look like they’ve been torn from some mythic catalog of My Great and Clever Self and are wholly impersonal. He’s put off not just by the preening he sees in the perfectly arranged family photographs, but the fact that he’s receiving pre-printed messages that have nothing to do with him.


“Even the font seems smug,” Hoover writes.


Oh, smug font. How upsetting.


There’s no question that people have mixed motives when they send out their cards. No doubt they want to put the best face on their own lives, offering an annual report marked more by pride, perhaps, than honesty.


Does this surprise anyone? Would it somehow be more festive to recount the slings and arrows, the illnesses and petty failures that may have marked or even dominated the year just ending? In sending out a mass mailing, even to family and friends, there’s a thin line between heartfelt and TMI.


It’s Just A Joke


I started sending out holiday cards maybe about 25 years ago. My photos have always been jokes, admittedly inspired at first by the idea of mocking the type of wholesome photo — often showing the family, with the dog, gathered by the tree — that was the style at the time.


Like Halloween costumers, I usually make fun of some moment in the news. Some of the images have been in poor enough taste that I ended up breaking down and including a letter as well, to soften the tone.


In recent years, I’ve come to enjoy writing and sending letters on their own merit. It’s a way of lending greater coherence to my own life’s story — and connecting with people I’m often otherwise barely in touch with — that maybe works better than a 10-second tweet or series of status updates.


Some people, in some years, like the letter a lot better than the gag photo.


Thinking Of You


But what’s the harm if they don’t? It’s a friendly gesture, not a writing contest. And, as Drexler points out in her Wall Street Journal article, it’s not as if many people are in any great danger of having friends send them more than one letter per year.


Whether driven by the desire to boast or amuse or simply good, old-fashioned guilt, holiday cards and letters are almost certainly well-intentioned. Like any gift, they are a sign that a person thought of you when you were absent, demonstrating that you have been in her thoughts, if only for a moment, and thus have some meaning in her life.


That’s true even if the attempt was lame. If you wouldn’t send back a letter stamped “Return to Sender: Insufficiently Moving,” why would you complain about it in print?


Good will to men, you know?




News




Read more about Go Ahead And Mail Your Boring Holiday Cards and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Sunday, October 20, 2013

Sox Vs. Cards: 5 Things To Know About The World Series

Sox Vs. Cards: 5 Things To Know About The World Series
http://isbigbrotherwatchingyou.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/b598f__p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif


The Boston Red Sox clinched the American League pennant last night during a 5-2 win over the Detroit Tigers in game 6 of the American League Championship Series.


That means the World Series matchup is set: It’ll be the Red Sox vs. the St. Louis Cardinals beginning Wednesday in Boston.


With that, here are five things you should know about the upcoming championship series:


— The Sox have redeemed themselves this year. Last season, they ended in last place with only 69 wins; this season, they clinched the American League East with 97 wins, tying with the Cards for the best season in baseball.


— This will be the first time since the Braves and Yankees played in 1999 that league win leaders will face off in the World Series.


MLB.com reports that the Cards and Sox have met in the world Series on four previous occasions — in 1934, 1946, 1967 and 2004. The first three meetings went to game seven and all three ended with a Cardinals win.


As the AP reports, the 2004 series marked the third Series visit for the Sox during the past decade. They steamrolled St. Louis in a four-game sweep and won their first championship since 1918. That said, the two teams have not played each other since 2008.


— The Cardinals are a formidable — and surprising — organization. They have captured four pennants in 10 years and won the World Series in 2006 and 2011, as well as 10 other times in their history. The New York Times reports that it would be easy to say the Cards are the Yankees of the National League. But, they managed their wins without the kind of stars the Yankees have. In fact, the Cardinals “develop names that most have never heard of.” So keep an eye out for Carlos Martinez, the 22-year-old reliever who throws 99 mph fast-balls and had never played anything above Double-A baseball before this season.




News




Read more about Sox Vs. Cards: 5 Things To Know About The World Series and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Thursday, June 13, 2013

IG: IRS Employees Abused Charge Cards and Wrote Bad Checks


Terence P. Jeffrey
CNS News
June 13, 2013


The Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration revealed in a recently released audit report that in fiscal years 2010 and 2011 more than 1,000 Internal Revenue Service employees misused government charge cards issued by Citibank.


The report said that during the two years in question agency employees sent Citibank a total of 325 bad checks written on personal accounts that had insufficient funds to cover them, that agency officials with top-secret security clearances had their charge accounts suspended for failure to pay the balances, and that the IRS had a tendency of being “overly lenient” in disciplining those who misused the cards.


Despite the more than 1,000 IRS employees who misused the charge cards, the inspector general’s report found that the IRS did a “generally effective” job in controlling its employees use of the cards.


Read more



This article was posted: Thursday, June 13, 2013 at 1:12 pm


Tags: domestic news, government corruption









Infowars



IG: IRS Employees Abused Charge Cards and Wrote Bad Checks