Bank details for sale on the web

As little as £1 buys you an active bank account

Written by Matt Chapman

More than 100 websites have been found selling account information for UK bank customers, including account details, Pins and security codes.

UK Information Commissioner Richard Thomas has called for an immediate investigation after The Times claimed that it had been able to download the information for 32 UK customers.

One individual was reportedly willing to sell up to 30,000 British credit card numbers for as little as £1 each.

An Information Commission spokesman said that the details on sale seemed to be for active accounts and could be enough for someone to spend money online.

Brian Spector, general manager at information security company Workshare, warned that the government had to act now.

"As major security breaches make their mark on the UK's consciousness, the true cost of a data breach is being revealed. Millions of people are at risk of fraud as their details are made available online for as little as £1," he said.

"We strongly believe that the government should introduce more stringent data breach laws and prosecute any organisation which takes such a laissez faire approach to protecting customer data."

Spector added that there is no excuse for major data breaches as the technology is available to enforce security policies to prevent leaks from occurring.

"But without punitive measures in place for breaches, organisations will sadly continue to adopt this 'it won't happen to me' attitude," he said.

This latest issue comes hot on the heels of the government's losing 25 million individuals' data, and misplacing two discs with the details of 15,000 Standard Life customers.

Tags:

reader comments

related articles

Under half of IT managers using encryption

Most companies feel secure against data leaks despite HMRC breach 30 Nov 2007

 

Canadian government exposes health data

Officials claim no criminal activity suspected 27 Nov 2007

HMRC data loss leaves 25 million exposed

Revenue chief Paul Gray resigns 21 Nov 2007

UK government guilty of DPA breach

Website farce exposes details of 50,000 applicants 15 Nov 2007

Data breaches are 'everyday incidents'

Companies know there is a problem, claims SanDisk 15 Nov 2007

Half of workers store data in insecure locations

'Worrying' statistics highlight threat to security and compliance 13 Nov 2007

HMRC loses data for 25 million people

Loss is "one of the world's biggest ID protection failures" 20 Nov 2007

'Home Office' disc wedged in laptop sold on eBay

Another potential data breach scandal for the government 28 Feb 2008

2007 Roundup: Data loss hits the headlines

Nationwide, Halifax, TK Maxx, HMRC and many, many more to blame 24 Dec 2007

today's top stories

Analysis: The true cost of printing

Organisations need to get a better sense of how much they spend on printing before finding ways to reduce it 05 Sep 2008

Computing podcast 4 September 2008

Find out what Michael Dell told Computing, and listen to our take on the latest browser wars 04 Sep 2008

Looking to the future - exclusive Michael Dell interview

Dell's chief executive talks to Computing about the way the company continues to adapt to major changes in the industry 04 Sep 2008

Interview: Delivering power where it's needed at Betfair

The online gambling firm is putting its money on grid computing and virtualisation to underpin global expansion 04 Sep 2008

E-paper displays are an open book

A display revolution is on the way - but only once the user interface issues are solved 04 Sep 2008

Most commented stories

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Jobs

Related jobs

Job of the week

Job alerts

Sign up here

Find your next job

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

VPN, Extranet and Intranet Solutions

WAN/ LAN Solutions

Network Security

Interoperability-Connectivity

Grid/ Utility Computing

Latest poll

Would you use a mobile phone as an alternative to cash?

Would you use a mobile phone as an alternative to cash?

When mobile phones include inbuilt payment technology - would you use one instead of cash?

Previous poll results

Latest audio and video articles

BlackBerry BoldVideo

Video Review: BlackBerry Bold

Technology editor Daniel Robinson takes a hands-on look at the latest device from Research in Motion 01 Sep 2008

Podcast imageAudio

Computing podcast 4 September 2008

Find out what Michael Dell told Computing, and listen to our take on the latest browser wars 04 Sep 2008

Latest in-depth articles

A meetingAnalysis

Turning adversity into an advantage

IT chiefs under pressure to make cost cuts can turn the situation to their benefit 04 Sep 2008

CloudAnalysis

How to introduce cloud computing into your organisation

Best practice advice from Forrester Research 04 Sep 2008

Primary Navigation