From Deseret News archives:
Bank workers biggest ID theft threat
Insiders with access to data may pose 70% to 80% of risk
This time, police believe, customers of Wachovia Corp. and Bank of America Corp. were the victims of bank employees, workers whose jobs at the Charlotte-based banks granted them access to information valuable enough to sell for $10 an account.
Security experts believe it's that battle against insiders the theft of Social Security numbers and other sensitive data by those with the authority to access it that will consume banks and other financial institutions as they fight a recent run of security breaches that doesn't appear to be waning.
"We've got a nasty problem and it keeps getting worse over the past couple of months," said Peter G. Neumann, a security expert with SRI International in Menlo Park, Calif. "Insiders have always been a concern, it's just that (institutions) are finally admitting it."
Security experts like Neumann believe inside jobs have the potential to be far more damaging to consumers than accidental losses of data, or attacks by hackers similar to one disclosed June 17 at Atlanta-based CardSystems Solutions Inc., which exposed 40 million credit and debit card accounts.
The insider case at Bank of America, Wachovia and two other banks involving a far smaller number of accounts than the hackers' assault on CardSystems Solutions could prove to be far worse for consumers, said Avivah Litan, an analyst with Stamford, Conn.-based Gartner Inc., an information technology research firm.
"It may not be bigger, but that stuff is a lot more dangerous," Litan said. "These are people who have access to a lot more personal information, so it's very serious."
Wachovia and Bank of America were forced to alert more than 100,000 customers in May after police in New Jersey charged nine people, including seven bank workers, in a plot to steal financial records of thousands of bank customers.
"About 70 to 80 percent of the risk is from insiders, although not all of them are as malicious as the case in New Jersey," said Steve Roop, vice president of marketing at San Francisco-based Vontu, a firm specializing in data loss prevention. "Sometimes it is well meaning but poorly informed workers."
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