An illegal, hacker-helmed identity-theft service called SSNDOB -- as in
Social Security Number and date of birth -- compromises servers at
several major US data brokers, according to a report.
An illegal service that sells personal data "on any U.S. resident" --
which can then be used for identity theft -- hacked into servers at
several major data aggregators including LexisNexis and Dun &
Bradstreet, according to a report.
The service's customers have, the report said, "spent hundreds of
thousands of dollars looking up SSNs, birthdays, driver's license
records, and obtaining unauthorized credit and background reports on
more than 4 million Americans."
In an article Wednesday, former Washington Post reporter Brian Krebs, who now writes the KrebsOnSecurity
blog, outlined how a site called Expose.su managed earlier this year to
post financial information on celebrities and government officials.
The site's activities triggered an FBI investigation, in part because Expose.su managed to publish the Social Security Number, address, and a credit report of then-FBI Director Robert Mueller.
According to Krebs, Expose.su (think "exposes you") got its info from
another site, ssndob.ms, or SSNDOB (think "Social Security Number" and
"date of birth"), which got the data by way of a small botnet it
operates. The botnet appears to have access to compromised servers at
several large data brokers in the United States, including LexisNexis,
Dun & Bradstreet, and Kroll Background America. (And, in regard to
the bot program installed on the hacked servers, Krebs reported that
"none of the 46 top antimalware tools on the market today detected it as
malicious.")
LexisNexis maintains one of the world's biggest electronic databases
for legal and public-records related information; Dun & Bradstreet
licenses info on businesses for use in credit decisions; and Kroll --
now a part of HireRight -- provides services related to employment
background, drug, and health screenings, Krebs noted.
"All three victim companies said they are working with federal
authorities and third-party forensics firms in the early stages of
determining how far the breaches extend, and whether indeed any
sensitive information was accessed and exfiltrated from their networks,"
Krebs said.
Krebs, who got his hands on a copy of SSNDOB's database, reported
that a closer examination of it indicates that since SSNDOB came on the
scene early last year, the service has sold more than 1.02 million
unique SSNs and nearly 3.1 million date of birth records.SSNDOB markets itself on underground cybercrime forums, Krebs said,
and sells data at prices that "range from 50 cents to $2.50 per record,
and from $5 to $15 for credit and background checks.
Customers pay for
their subscriptions using largely unregulated and anonymous virtual
currencies, such as Bitcoin and WebMoney." Krebs also said SSNDOB
appears "to have licensed its system for use by at least a dozen
high-volume users" and that there's some evidence these users "are
operating third-party identity theft services."
The FBI confirmed that a bureau investigation into the SSNDOB server
hacks is ongoing, Krebs reported, adding that a spokesperson wouldn't
provide any details.
No comments:
Post a Comment