Consumer Watch: The Myth of Secure E-Shopping
Five years into the e-commerce revolution, security problems still haunt even large Web sites.
Anne Kandra
From the July 2001 issue of PC World magazine Posted Friday, May 18, 2001
When Ryan Roth's monthly credit card statement arrived with more than
$2000 in unauthorized charges, the 30-year-old public relations executive from
Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, thought she knew just who to blame. An avid online
shopper, Roth suspects that her credit card information leaked from a
transaction with a small kitchen supplies site she visited while doing holiday
shopping. The site had not posted any privacy or security statements, and Roth
admits to having had a "bad feeling" about this omission.
Roth's credit card company covered the bogus charges, but Roth drew an
understandable conclusion.『I'll stick with national e-tailers from now on,
established sites that have the resources to invest in security technology on
their end,』she says.
Unfortunately, the moral of the story may not be so clear. It's
tempting to believe that the biggest, best-established Web merchants have
security all figured out. But judging from frequent reports of major sites
being hacked and customer information compromised, that's not the case. As
unlucky customers of CD Universe, Travelocity, Columbia House, Ikea, and even
Western Union can attest, small sites aren't the only ones to get hit.
『Virtually every medium-size to large e-commerce site has been affected by
fraud of some sort,』says Joseph McDonnell, CEO of online security firm
IShopSecure.
And a recent Gartner Group study predicts a wave of small-scale
e-commerce theft within the next two years, mostly attributable to the
larcenies of an increasing number of technically sophisticated individuals in
economically depressed countries. According to the study, many recent hack
attacks on e-commerce sites can be traced to Russia. Recent FBI reports
corroborate this, adding that stolen credit card information may have been sold
to organized crime rings operating in Eastern Europe.
Okay, so you may be taking a chance by purchasing that digital camera
online. You already knew that. But isn't it just as dangerous to plunk down
your credit card at a bricks-and-mortar retail store or the caf� down
the street? Not according to McDonnell. "Anonymity is a key difference," he
says. "People can hide behind their computers." Add to that the vast quantity
of personal information a determined hacker can obtain on the Internet--your
name, address, e-mail account, phone number, credit card information,
passwords, Social Security number, and mother's maiden name, just for
starters--and you have an environment that's ripe for theft. McDonnell puts it
bluntly: "Consumers should be 100 times more cautious [doing business]
online."
What are e-tailers doing to maintain or beef up site security? Not
enough, experts say. The security statements found on many retail Web sites may
sound comforting, but in many cases they don't mean much. Most offer vague
reassurances about using industry-standard encryption technology, but such
encryption applies only to the actual transfer of customer data.
As important as the transaction itself is how a Web site stores your
data after you buy--and here many sites falter. One of the most common hack
attacks involves breaking into a server that stores customer data from past
transactions. "The important question," says IShopSecure's McDonnell,『is where
your credit information is being stored. You don't want it sitting unprotected
in a database.』
And the Web site you buy from may not be the only one you have to worry
about. Many sites contract with other firms to process credit card information,
and those third-party sites may be vulnerable to attack, too. Last December,
Creditcards.com, which handles credit card transactions for a number of online
merchants, revealed that someone had hacked into its site and posted more than
55,000 credit card numbers on the Internet.
The lack of a posted security or privacy policy should raise a red
flag. Last year, John Hairell, a senior programmer/analyst for NASA in
Greenbelt, Maryland, was about to complete a transaction on the rare-book site
Bibliofind when he noticed the site had no posted security or privacy
statement. Hairell e-mailed the company to ask about its security policies. Two
months later, he received a vaguely worded response that did little to reassure
him. He decided not to do business with the site. Hairell's caution looked wise
when in March of this year, thousands of Bibliofind customers received a terse
e-mail message saying that the company's servers had been violated,
compromising customers' credit information.
At press time, the site--which has been on the Web since 1996--still
hadn't posted a privacy or security policy. Bibliofind representative Alisa
Feinstein says that the company (now owned by Amazon.com) is planning to update
the site. That may be too little, too late for Hairell.『This has put me off of
online retailing,』he says. "There's just not enough accountability when it
comes to security."
Ultimately, however, online security breaches are more harmful to
merchants than to consumers. After all, consumers have a powerful safety net:
credit cards. As long as you use one for your online purchases, you're covered
for any unauthorized charges over $50--though dealing with a fraud claim is
usually a hassle. (Many Web sites, such as the Lands' End site, promise to
reimburse you the $50 if the security leak is traced to their servers.)
In contrast, online merchants are largely liable for fraudulent
charges, so a security lapse can easily ruin a smaller e-tailer. And the
problem is not just financial--the bad publicity from a break-in can do more
damage than the dollar loss.
Caveat E-Emptor
Clearly, if e-commerce is to flourish, e-tailers need to start taking
security more seriously and put tools in place to prevent online fraud. Some
companies have, but too many haven't. In the meantime, here is what you can do
to protect yourself:
Review your credit card statement regularly and carefully.
Think about obtaining a low-credit-limit card specifically for online
purchases. That way, you have less at stake if your credit information is
stolen.
Change your passwords frequently, and keep them cryptic.
Consider the pros and cons carefully before permitting a site to
store your credit card information for future purchases.
Avoid sites that don't post clear privacy and security policies or
contact information, including a physical street address and working phone
number.
When you inspect a site's security policies, look for assurances that
information is encrypted on all servers connected to the Net and that security
tools are in place to protect applications like the shopping cart. If the
policy doesn't say, ask the site's administrator for clarification.
I'm not trying to scare you away from shopping online. The vast
majority of transactions go through without a hitch. But shop safely. And if
you come across a site whose security you don't trust, let the administrator
know why you won't shop there. Online retailers will take security seriously
when they know we do.
Anne Kandra is a contributing editor and Grace Aquino is an
associate editor for PC World.
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