NEW YORK - Luxury merchant Neiman Marcus confirmed Saturday
that thieves stole some of its customers' payment card information and made
unauthorized charges over the holiday season, becoming the second retailer in
recent weeks to announce it had fallen victim to a cyber-security attack.
The hacking, coming weeks after Target Corp. revealed its
own breach, underscores the increasing challenges that merchants have in
thwarting security breaches.
Ginger Reeder, spokeswoman for Dallas-based Neiman Marcus
Group Ltd., said in an email Saturday that the retailer had been notified in
mid-December by its credit card processor about potentially unauthorized payment
activity following customer purchases at stores. On Jan. 1, a forensics firm
confirmed evidence that the upscale retailer was a victim of a criminal
cyber-security intrusion and that some customers' credit and debit cards were
possibly compromised as a result.
Reeder wouldn't estimate how many customers may be affected
but said the merchant is notifying customers whose cards it now knows were used
fraudulently. Neiman Marcus, which operates more than 40 upscale stores and
clearance stores, is working with the Secret Service on the breach, she said.
"We have begun to contain the intrusion and have taken
significant steps to further enhance information security," Reeder wrote.
Robert Siciliano, a security expert with McAfee, a computer
security software maker, says it is possible Neiman Marcus doesn't yet know the
extent of the breach. He says he believes that the Neiman Marcus and Target
thefts were likely committed by the same organized group, based on his
experience and the fact that the incidents happened at around the same time.
"It's a knee-jerk reaction that the security industry
has right now," he added.
Target disclosed Friday that its massive data theft was
significantly more extensive and affected millions more shoppers than the
company announced in December. The second largest U.S. discounter said hackers
stole personal information - including names, phone numbers, email and mailing
addresses - from as many as 70 million customers as part of a data breach it
discovered last month.
The Minneapolis-based Target announced Dec. 19 that some 40
million credit and debit card accounts had been affected by a data breach that
happened from Nov. 27 to Dec. 15 - just as the holiday shopping season was
getting into gear.
As part of that announcement, the company said customers'
names, credit and debit card numbers, card expiration dates, debit-card PINs
and the embedded code on the magnetic strip on the back of cards had been
stolen.
According to new information gleaned from its investigation
with the Secret Service and the Department of Justice, Target said Friday that
criminals also took non-credit card related data for some 70 million customers.
This is information Target obtained from customers who, among other things,
used a call center and offered their phone number or shopped online and
provided an email address.
Some overlap exists between the 70 million individuals and
the 40 million compromised credit and debit accounts, Target said.
When Target releases a final tally, the theft could become
the largest data breach on record for a retailer, surpassing an incident
uncovered in 2007 that saw more than 90 million records pilfered from TJX Cos.
Inc.
Target acknowledged Friday that the news of the data theft
has scared some shoppers away. It cut its earnings outlook for the quarter that
covers the crucial holiday season and warned that sales would be down for the
period.
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