CardSystems Sets Plan to Comply With Security Standards
By ERIC DASH
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/07/08/business/08card.html?pagewanted=print

CardSystems Solutions, the credit card payment processor at the center of
one of the biggest data breaches, said yesterday that it hoped to comply
with the industry's security standards by the end of August, at least eight
months after data thieves installed software on its computer network to
facilitate a break-in.

CardSystems disclosed last month that its computer network in Tucson had
been compromised, putting the sensitive account information of as many as 40
million cardholders at risk for fraud.

The company's chief executive, John M. Perry, acknowledged that CardSystems
had been improperly storing data, violating Visa and MasterCard security
rules.

Yesterday, CardSystems said that it had hired AmbironTrustWave, a security
auditor based in Chicago, to assess its data protection technology, policies
and practices. Mr. Perry said on June 19 that data thieves had obtained from
CardSystems' computer network a file containing the names, account numbers
and security code data of about 200,000 cardholders. A person briefed on the
matter said that software had been installed secretly on the network to
facilitate the theft.

MasterCard and Visa said that storing the information on the 200,000
cardholders, even for what Mr. Perry called "research purposes," was in
violation of their security rules.

At the time, Mr. Perry said that the company was taking steps to remedy that
practice and that it "no longer stored that data on files." It is unclear if
CardSystems was working with another security specialist at that time, but
since the incident was disclosed, it said it had bought new software to
bolster data protection.

While MasterCard disclosed the incident on June 18, it said that it had
focused on CardSystems from as early as April. MasterCard did not conclude
that the processor's systems had been breached until a forensic
investigation by Cybertrust of Herndon, Va., in mid-May. But an Australian
bank said that it was able to detect fraud related to CardSystems as early
as the end of last year.

Even before the breach, CardSystems had taken steps to improve its security.
In December 2003, it hired Cable and Wireless Americas, now part of Savvis
Communications, to conduct a similar security audit for compliance with Visa
rules. Savvis said the company made some improvements and was certified by
Visa in June 2004. MasterCard said CardSystems was never certified as
compliant with its security rules; Visa said CardSystems was no longer in
compliance after Visa investigated the processor in May.

Nonetheless, CardSystems was allowed to handle millions of consumer
transactions handled by both card companies and other major brands like
Discover Financial and American Express.

The hiring of a new security auditor is a first step as CardSystems works to
meet with the payment industry's security rules that have often been loosely
enforced.

Still, CardSystems has several other inquiries on its hands. Both the
Federal Bureau of Investigation and a group of federal banking regulators
are investigating the company, and a group of state attorneys general has
sent letters requesting information on the break-in.



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