blog.wired.com — Hackers have crossed into new frontiers by devising sophisticated ways to steal large amounts of personal identification numbers, or PINs, protecting credit and debit cards, says an investigator. The attacks involve both unencrypted PINs and encrypted PINs that attackers have found a way to crack,...
Apr 15, 2009 View in Crawl 4
richlwApr 15, 2009
that's amazing, I have the same combination on my luggage!
Closed AccountApr 15, 2009
@Rich;'Data, you're overanalyzing.'
liteemupgoodApr 15, 2009
I'm sure there is a bailout for this....
ntopazApr 16, 2009
Is this one of those Overload-Your-Post-With-Technical-Jargon-to-Confuse-Laymen posts in order to trick people into digging you up?
starmanfallsApr 16, 2009
Woooosh!!
Closed AccountApr 16, 2009
wells fargo sucksBofA :)
maz2331Apr 23, 2009
Sometimes crime syndicates co-opt insiders. Say the insider owes a huge gambling debt and is due for a visit by Tony "No Neck", but he can pay it off with some "little details"....
maz2331Apr 23, 2009
I do it because my bank waives all monthly account fees if I do at least 6 PIN-less transactions per month.
maz2331Apr 23, 2009
I seriously doubt anyone has ever cracked the IBM z-Series mainframes, nor the minicomputers to any serious extent. Those aren't PCs.