Original URL: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/09/24/data_id_theft_secret/
Credit card companies can keep data ID theft secret
By Andrew Orlowski in San Francisco (andrew.orlowski at theregister.co.uk)
Published Saturday 24th September 2005 06:57 GMT

Credit card companies don't have to notify customers their personal
information has been stolen, a California Judge ruled today.

The Rothken law firm in Marin County, Ca had brought a class action suit on
behalf of cardholders and merchants against CardSystems Solutions, Visa and
MasterCard following a high profile data ID heist in June. [PDF, 200kb
(http://www.techfirm.com/cardsystems.pdf)]

The suit accused the defendents of violating California state law by failing
to notify them that personal data had been viewed by hackers, or the data
obtained by the intruders.

In June, CardSystems admitted intruders had compromised the confidentiality
of 40 million credit card holders, and 200,000 records had left the network.
CardSystems had refused to notify the card holders. The Rothken suit also
requested that chargeback fees or penalties on hapless card holders who were
the victims of ID theft should be waived.

But a San Francisco Superior Court Judge, Richard Kramer, disagreed. "I
don't see the emergency," he said. "I don't think there is an immediate
threat of irreparable injury" to consumers.

Visa and MasterCard argued that because their relationship is with the
issuing banks, not the customers, they don't have to notify the victims.

The Californian disclosure law
(http://www.theregister.co.uk/2003/01/07/california_disclosure_law_has_natio
nal/), passed in January 2003 and a template for disclosure legislation in
other states, says that consumers should be notified in the case of ID
theft, although it's riddled with loopholes.

The effects of online security fears are already being felt. Analyst firm
Gartner Group has revised its 2005 ecommerce prediction downwards
(http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/06/23/ecommerce_decline/) this year after
42 per cent of consumers said they were spending less online because of
security fears. Some 14 per cent have stopped paying bills online
altogether. ®



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