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NETWORKED CASH REGISTERS are an important part of a large retail operation they allow stores to change prices instantly and make inventory tracking easier. In addition, wireless networks offer added convenience, making temporary outdoor sidewalk cash registers much easier to install. Its not clear how many stores use the so-called wireless point-of-sale terminal, but they are clearly on the rise. For example, Kmart announced last year it planned to install wireless technology in all 2,100 stores. But theres a downside to the nifty wireless technology. The data is broadcast as a radio signal, which carries outside the store. Hackers, using laptop computers equipped with a special antenna, can listen in on such traffic, and if its not encrypted, they can read it almost like office workers read e-mail. |
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An anonymous security researcher announced on a computer security research mailing list Wednesday that several U.S. retailers have made the mistake of installing wireless cash registers and transmitting the traffic in clear text, without encryption. By sitting in the parking lot, the researcher said, he could listen in on credit card numbers being beamed around the store. Several researchers chimed in to say it was old news, discovered by the computer underground as much as two years ago. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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There are security mechanisms in place, but whether or not (the stores) use them is a different story, Ferrone said. If the security is not turned on, then the traffic would be open. However, Ray Martino, Symbols vice president of wireless network products, said that credit card data wouldnt normally be among the traffic thats broadcast through the air. Credit card purchases still require authorization from a bank, meaning the traffic must travel over a phone line. But several computer hackers contacted by MSNBC.com said they had spied credit card data in among the wireless traffic theyd captured. BEST BUY QUICKLY RESPONDS Best Buy, the nations No. 1 consumer electronics retailer with 480 stores, was the retailer most often cited in the notes. The company responded quickly on Wednesday spokesperson Donna Beadle, in an e-mail, said the company had deactivated our wireless temporary cash registers that transmit information via LAN connections. |
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Beadle added that wireless terminals actually represented a small percentage of transactions. Customer privacy is of the utmost importance to Best Buy and we will further investigate, she said. Several researchers told MSNBC.com theyd been able to spy traffic at Wal-Mart and Home Depot stores. Wal-Mart didnt immediately return phone calls. Don Harrison, spokesperson for Home Depot, said any wireless traffic at Home Depot stores is limited to price scanning information no credit card data is ever transmitted through the air. Home Depot stores use line busting technology, where items being purchased by a customer on an excessively long checkout line are scanned by an employee with a wireless device, speeding up the checkout process. We do have wireless technology in the store, but its all back-end stuff. At the point of sale, everything is hard-wired, and theres no way a hackers going to get that (data), Harrison said. While knowledge of the flaw might have been limited to a small group prior to Wednesday, its publication to a security mailing list serves as an invitation for curious computer hackers and computer criminals to try it out. I assume half the mailing list is going to be driving around their towns tonight scanning for this problem. I know I will, wrote one. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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