delphipsmith: (Luddite laptop)
delphipsmith ([personal profile] delphipsmith) wrote2012-08-07 09:36 pm
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If you have an Apple account and an Amazon account, read this

A hacker has discovered -- and, happily, disclosed -- a "blind spot" between Apple and Amazon's identity and account verification procedures:

Details are here and here.

I have to say this had never occurred to me as a way to game the system, but it's scary easy because so much information is available online (names, addresses, phone numbers, email addresses) and I'll bet can be done with other paired accounts as well. I know how many places use the last 4 digits of your credit card as verification.

Amazon claims this has since been fixed, but I have my doubts. My wallet was stolen last year and within four hours I had closed all my credit and debit cards, but the thief got my debit card turned back on via the simple route of calling my bank, pretending to be me, and telling them the card had only been lost and was now found. Wow.

It's almost enough to make you leave ze interwebz entirely. Almost, because otherwise where would I go for beta readers??

[identity profile] droxy.livejournal.com 2012-08-08 01:50 am (UTC)(link)
With an unlimited spokeo account anyone can find you and all your identities. I will not do financial transactions over my iphone.

Thanks for sharing!

Adding now that Apple is just as vulernable, if not more so, than windows.

Sooo glad I dont use iCloud.
Edited 2012-08-08 02:05 (UTC)

[identity profile] ennyousai.livejournal.com 2012-08-08 03:46 am (UTC)(link)
And your bank did not try to verify your identity in any way? I mean, damn. o.0

[identity profile] shiv5468.livejournal.com 2012-08-08 07:17 am (UTC)(link)
Boggles.

Fortunately I don't have an apple account, and I'd hope they've learned from this lesson!
madeleone: (Default)

[personal profile] madeleone 2012-08-08 02:13 pm (UTC)(link)
Well that's a scary thing!

[identity profile] anna-bird.livejournal.com 2012-08-15 02:16 pm (UTC)(link)
Unreal. One thing that strikes me about the Matt Honan event AND your own is that the ultimate basis for getting the access was a person-to-person event rather than a brute force password cracking or a further theft of info online or physical. Instead these thieves played on better nature/empathy of company folks to get what they needed. It's such a simple con from that perspective! All persuasion.

Sorry about your wallet, though! This is probably a silly question, but did the thief ever get caught?