Data security breaches happen daily in too many places at once to
keep count. But what constitutes a huge breach versus a small one? For
some perspective, we take a look at 15 of the biggest incidents in
recent memory. Helping us out are security practitioners from a variety
of industries, including more than a dozen members of LinkedIn's Information Security Community, who provided nominations for the list.
By Taylor Armerding
- 1. Heartland Payment Systems
- Date: March 2008
- Impact: 134 million credit cards exposed through SQL injection to install spyware on Heartland's data systems.
- 2. TJX Companies Inc.
- Date: December 2006
- Impact: 94 million credit cards exposed. There are conflicting accounts about how this happened. One supposes that a group of hackers took advantage of a weak data encryption system and stole credit card data during a wireless transfer between two Marshall's stores in Miami, Fla. The other has them breaking into the TJX network through in-store kiosks that allowed people to apply for jobs electronically. According to KNOS Project cofounder and chief architect Kevin McAleavey, this was possible because TJX's network wasn't protected by any firewalls. Albert Gonzalez, hacking legend and ringleader of the Heartland breach, was convicted and sentenced to 40 years in prison, while 11 others were arrested.
- 3. Epsilon
- Date: March 2011
- Impact: Exposed names and e-mails of millions of customers stored in more than 108 retail stores plus several huge financial firms like CitiGroup Inc. and the non-profit educational organization, College Board.
- 4. RSA Security
- Date: March 2011
- Impact: Possibly 40 million employee records stolen.
- 5. Stuxnet
- Date: Sometime in 2010, but origins date to 2007
- Impact: Meant to attack Iran's nuclear power program, but will also serve as a template for real-world intrusion and service disruption of power grids, water supplies or public transportation systems.
- 6. Department of Veterans Affairs
- Date: May 2006
- Impact: An unencrypted national database with names, Social Security numbers, dates of births, and some disability ratings for 26.5 million veterans, active-duty military personnel and spouses was stolen.
- 7. Sony's PlayStation Network
- Date: April 20, 2011
- Impact: 77 million PlayStation Network accounts hacked; Sony is said to have lost millions while the site was down for a month.
- 8. ESTsoft
- Date: July-August 2011
- Impact: The personal information of 35 million South Koreans was exposed after hackers breached the security of a popular software provider.
- 9. Gawker Media
- Date: December 2010
- Impact: Compromised e-mail addresses and passwords of about 1.3 million commenters on popular blogs like Lifehacker, Gizmodo, and Jezebel, plus the theft of the source code for Gawker's custom-built content management system.
- 10. Google/other Silicon Valley companies
- Date: Mid-2009
- Impact: Stolen intellectual property
- 11. VeriSign
- Date: Throughout 2010
- Impact: Undisclosed information stolen
- 12. CardSystems Solutions
- Date: June 2005
- Impact: 40 million credit card accounts exposed. CSS, one of the top payment processors for Visa, MasterCard, American Express is ultimately forced into acquisition.
- 13. AOL
- Date: August 6, 2006
- Impact: Data on more than 20 million web inquiries, from more than 650,000 users, including shopping and banking data were posted publicly on a web site.
- 14. Monster.com
- Date: August 2007
- Impact: Confidential information of 1.3 million job seekers stolen and used in a phishing scam.
- 15. Fidelity National Information Services
- Date: July 2007
- Impact: An employee of FIS subsidiary Certegy Check Services stole 3.2 million customer records including credit card, banking and personal information.
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