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DATE | 2005-06-21 |
FROM | Ruben Safir
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SUBJECT | Subject: [NYLXS - HANGOUT] Shred those Credit Cards
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Regulators Start Inquiry in Data Loss * E-Mail This * Printer-Friendly * Reprints
By ERIC DASH Published: June 22, 2005
Federal banking regulators said yesterday that they had started an investigation into CardSystems Solutions, the payment processor where a security breach has put millions of American cardholders at risk for fraud.
The Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council, an interagency group of the federal banking regulators, said the investigation began last week. Officials are assessing security at CardSystems' operational centers, at the major credit card companies and at any banks that may be involved, the council said. It would not identify the banks contacted in the inquiry.
The investigation is expected to take two to four weeks. There is a separate criminal investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
MasterCard said Friday that information from 40 million credit and debit card accounts was exposed after an intruder gained access to CardSystems' computer network. CardSystems has acknowledged that the account information of perhaps 200,000 cards from Visa, MasterCard and American Express was stolen.
"We became aware of an issue, and we will now conduct an examination," said Michael L. Jackson, the associate director of the consumer protection division of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, a member of the interagency council.
"When you are talking about a theft of that size, that is the logical step," said Mr. Jackson, who oversees the regulation of information technology for the banking industry.
A CardSystems spokeswoman said the company declined to comment.
The federal banking regulators are interviewing officials at CardSystems to determine whether its computer system and internal controls met government security guidelines. They are also reviewing the results of the processing company's financial and security audits.
"We look to see if they have had vulnerability assessments, scans, and if they have firewalls," Mr. Jackson said.
The assessment will also look at whether the customer data was encrypted. "There can be differences in what our expectations are and their expectations are," he said.
Mr. Jackson said federal regulators had also contacted MasterCard, Visa, American Express and the other card companies to help assess what went wrong at CardSystems.
A Visa spokeswoman, Rosetta Jones, said the company met with the regulator as part of a regular review, but the data breach was only one of the items discussed. Representatives of MasterCard and Visa said they did not know if their companies had been contacted by the regulators.
Mr. Jackson said the regulators were identifying the banks that issue credit cards to consumers and transfer money to merchants. Those banks are also responsible for ensuring that the payment processors they hire follow the security rules of the payment associations.
"We want to know what they know," Mr. Jackson said.
Security oversight of the major players in the credit card industry is as complicated as the multistep payment process itself.
The banks that issue cards and hire the processing companies may be regulated by one of five federal agencies; they are also subject to the regulatory council's information technology and security assessment every 18 to 36 months.
The payment associations have no direct federal financial regulator, but they are also subject to the council's security review on a similar schedule. Both groups may also be subject to informal reviews.
There is, however, no regular security assessment for processing companies, like CardSystems, even though they handle the transaction data of millions of consumers each day.
Assessments of processors are conducted as needed. "When there are issues or risks are identified, we conduct an investigation," Mr. Jackson said.
Associations like Visa and MasterCard impose rules for payment processors that handle data linked to their network.
The processors are required to pass an annual outside security audit to ensure they meet the associations' standards.
They are also subject to quarterly network scans to detect any vulnerabilities, but those results are made available to the payment associations only on request.
The primary oversight of a processing company's security, however, is left to the banks that pay for the service.
"MasterCard requires our banks to comply with all our standards," said Joshua Peirez, a senior vice president at MasterCard who is responsible for policy.
Mr. Peirez said it was up to the banks, and those they contract with, to ensure compliance.
The interagency council has only indirect enforcement power over the processors.
"We don't have enforcement" over these companies, Mr. Jackson said. "We have enforcement over financial institutions."
The banks, he added, "can assess monetary penalties" against noncompliant processors. Ultimately, he added, "They don't have to sponsor them anymore."
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