no image

Hackers threaten to publish Belgian bank’s customer data

Life
Prof Sharon Glynn, University of Galway

3 May 2012

Hackers claimed to have breached the systems of the Belgian credit provider Elantis and threatened to publish confidential customer information if the bank does not pay €150,000 before Friday, May 4, they said in a statement posted to Pastebin. Elantis confirmed the data breach but said it will not give in to extortion threats.

The hackers claim to have captured login credentials and tables with online loan applications which hold data such as full names, job descriptions, contact information, ID card numbers and income figures. They demanded a payment of "the equivalent of roughly €150,000", with which Elantis could prevent the publication of confidential customer information, they said in a Pastebin post published on Tuesday. According to the hackers the data was stored unprotected and unencrypted on the servers. To prove the hack, parts of what they claimed to be captured customer data were published.

"While this could be called ‘blackmail,’ we prefer to think of it as an ‘idiot tax’ for leaving confidential data unprotected on a Web server," they said.

 

advertisement



 

The hackers contacted the bank via e-mail last Friday, said Moniek Delvou, spokeswoman for Belfius Bank (formerly known as Dexia), Elantis’ parent company. "We assume they possibly captured the data of 3,700 customers," Delvou said, adding that the compromised data could belong to existing and potential customers. Elantis customers were informed of the data breach, according to Delvou.

After finding out what happened the Elantis site was taken offline and the bank contacted the Belgian Federal High Tech Crime Unit which is now investigating the case, Delvou said. An unnamed specialised American security firm is also conducting an investigation, she added.

"We are not prepared to pay," Delvou said. "We don’t like blackmail."

The hackers did not specify in what way Elantis should pay the €150,000, and after the e-mail sent last Friday there has been no contact between the hackers and the bank, she said. Elantis plans to put its site back online when it is deemed secure enough, according to Delvou.

IDG News Service

Read More:


Back to Top ↑

TechCentral.ie