Tag Archive for: retailer

Hackers hit UK phone retailer, possibly compromising data of up to 2.4M customers

Cyberthieves broke into the IT systems of Carphone Warehouse, a large cell phone retailer in the U.K., and may have stolen personal and bank data of up to 2.4 million customers and the credit card details of up to 90,000 customers.

Specifically, the division that was attacked operates the OneStopPhoneShop.com, e2save.com and Mobiles.co.uk websites, and provides services to iD Mobile, TalkTalk Mobile, Talk Mobile and some customers of Carphone Warehouse, the company said Saturday in an emailed statement.

The attack, which the company described as “sophisticated,” was discovered Wednesday afternoon, and likely happened at some point in the two weeks prior to the discovery. Carphone Warehouse has secured the breached systems, put in place additional safety measures and hired a security company to determine what data was compromised. It is also notifying customers that could be affected.

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Network World Security

American retailer Genesco sues Visa, demands $13m in PCI-DSS data breach fines paid back

Genesco, a massive American retailer, suffered an intrusion by cybercrooks in 2010. It was subsequently “fined” over $ 10m by the payment card industry. Now it wants its money back…
Naked Security – Sophos

Could Surface be coming to a retailer near you?

First it was the turn of Windows 8, with reports of poor sales and questions about its early performance on the market going unanswered. With Microsoft stating some facts (though by no means giving a complete picture) that indicate brisk, if not unprecedented, sales, the kvetching about Windows 8’s performance has got a little quieter.

So now it is the turn of Microsoft’s Surface for Windows RT tablet to be in the sales figure spotlight. The focus is understandable. Surface RT is a significant departure from Microsoft’s traditional business model, with Microsoft not just writing the software, but also specifying and designing the hardware, commissioning its manufacture, and selling the finished units through its online store and brick-and-mortar outlets throughout the US.

Ever since Surface was announced back in June, Microsoft has been vague about how it expected Surface to perform, and only a little more specific about its role in the market. At the company’s Worldwide Partner Conference (WPC) in July, CEO Steve Ballmer said that of the 375 million Windows 8 devices that the company forecast it would sell in the first 12 months of availability, “a few million” would be Surfaces. Surface was not intended to replace the OEMs, it was rather a “design point” created to fulfil the needs of a certain slice of the PC market.

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Ars Technica » Technology Lab