cyber security sleuths have detected a 'black' private information
stealing virus in the Indian online banking transactions space and have alerted
consumers who swipe debit or credit cards at shopping counters to make
payments.
The 'severely' spreading virus of the Trojan family has been
detected conducting its clandestine operations at the point of sale counters
placed at retail terminals after the RBI made it mandatory in December last year
for debit cards holders to punch in their PIN every time they make a
purchase.
The virus named 'Dexter, black POS, memory dump and grabber'
can acquire seven aliases when infecting a system and once it is successful in
breaching the security protocols of a POS terminal, it steals confidential data
like card holder's name, account number, expiration date, CVV code and other
discretionary information which could lead to financially compromising and
phishing attacks on the card at a later stage.
"It has been reported that
malware campaigns targeting payment card processing, point-of-sale, check out
systems or equipment are on the rise.
"The common infection vectors for
POS system malwares includes phishing emails or social engineering techniques to
deliver the malware, use of default or weak credentials, unauthorised access,
open wireless networks along with the methods of installing malware as a part of
service," a latest advisory issued to the public by the Computer Emergency
Response Team said. (from Rediff.com)
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