What's new

Closed 7-Eleven was häçked

Status
Not open for further replies.

Miz_Me

Contributor
Joined
Apr 6, 2017
Posts
11,206
Reaction
4,452
Points
2,660
Age
26
May relevant kaya ito sa pagkawala ng cliqq rewards kanina?

Keen to jump on the mobile payments bandwagon, 7-Eleven’s Japanese business recently launched 7Pay for customers looking for a quick and easy way to purchase items in-store.

But just days after the system went live at the beginning of last week, a number of customers started complaining that they were being charged for items they hadn’t bought.

The company has now suspended use of its mobile payment service while it investigates 7Pay’s security procedures, or lack thereof. In a statement released at the end of last week, 7-Eleven admitted that häçkers had accessed the app and made bogus transactions affecting 900 customers to the tune of $506,000.

On Saturday, July 6, the You do not have permission to view the full content of this post. Log in or register now. reported the arrest of two Chinese men who may be connected to the häçk, with one of them suspected of attempted fraud after paying 730,000 yen (about $6,750) to purchase nearly 150 cartons of e-c i ga retes cartridges from a 7-Eleven store in Tokyo, allegedly using stolen IDs.

7Pay working using a bar code that appeared on the customer’s smartphone, with a cashier scanning it to charge the cost of the items to the customer’s linked debit or credit card.

But a report by You do not have permission to view the full content of this post. Log in or register now. said the app was so poorly designed that it allowed anyone with knowledge of a customer’s email address, date of birth, and phone number to take over an account.

The häçker did this by using the data to reset an account’s password, with the reset link able to be sent to the häçker’s email address instead of the account owner’s. The häçker could then take control of the account.

The suggestion is that häçkers automated the attack using information gathered in previous online security breaches targeting Japanese databases.

The alarming ease with which häçkers were able to exploit 7Pay prompted the Japanese government to get involved, with the Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry accusing 7-Eleven of failing to properly adhere to guidelines preventing such unauthorized access. The company, which operates more than 20,000 stores in Japan, has apologized for the mishap and promised to fully reimburse those affected.

The 7Pay incident brings to mind another mobile payment breach several years ago when the now-defunct CurrentC system was You do not have permission to view the full content of this post. Log in or register now. during its testing phase. Whether 7Pay will be resurrected with much-improved security or ends up going the same way as CurrentC remains to be seen.
 
Last edited:
Dito din satin dati na häçk ang website ng 7/11 group ng ATOR.. promise legit yan..😊
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Similar threads

Back
Top