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Re: FV Demonstrates Fatal Flaw in Software Encryption of Credit Cards
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Hello Nathaniel Borenstein <[email protected]>
and [email protected], Peter Monta <[email protected]>
NSB wrote:
> Excerpts from mail: 29-Jan-96 Re: FV Demonstrates Fatal F.. Peter
> [email protected] (651*)
...
> > > NEVER TYPE YOUR CREDIT CARD NUMBER INTO A COMPUTER.
>
> > Never speak it either. Walls (and audio peripherals) have ears.
>
> When you can give me a cheap device that can be planted in the wall,
> listen to everything you say, and just spit out the credit card numbers,
> then I'll start to be worried about speaking it.
...
And in a later post:
...
> I used to trust the telephone not to be tapped in a selective way based
> on keyword recognition, but in recent years, with the improvement in
> voice recognition technology, I have stopped trusting it that way, and I
> know plenty of other people have too -- if you say "NSA" into a cellular
> call, you are probably inviting an eavesdropper.
...
So, what's wrong with the virus listening through the audio card?
Many people have their phone close to their computer, and credit-card
numbers spoken over the phone are usually spoken clearly.
> Similarly, we trust the postal service and certain uses of email not to
> be free of any insecurities, but to be hard to defeat in a large scale
> automated way.
...
Presumably mail from FV asking for confirmation wouldn't be too hard
to search for - I guess one would watch WinSock for connection
to the POP port then grab the password etc, followed by periodically
checking for new e-mail (without the user's knowledge).
Many people would already have their CC number on the computer somewhere,
in a letter they wrote (and later printed out and posted). If it's a virus,
it doesn't even need a net connection to communicate it back (it can just
remember it and pass it 'home' several infections later).
The real problem ain't the net, but lousy security in home systems.
(Hmm, with the sound cards, couldn't the virus just hypnotise the user....)
Jiri
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