Tag Archive: TEDxBigApple

Feb 11 2012

How to Say You’ve Been Hacked… in a Good Way

I received an e-mail from TEDxBigApple this morning that started with the line:

We’ve been hacked!

Now, since TED is all about innovation, I assumed this was a (not so) clever marketing attempt at using the “other” definition of hacker, so I read on.

No, no. They were hacked.

As you know, Feb 4th was centered around Disruptive Ideas, and as poetic justice would have it, our success means we have been unfortunately pranked by a Disruptive force. Someone or someones surreptitiously gained access to our registered database and has sent out an invitation to join a site called biapplepulse.com.

Wait, what?

[youtube_sc url="AcvDgZI91SU" title="YouTube%20Video%20Player" modestbranding="1" hd="1"]

Ok, so it’s not incompetence anymore, but poetic justice; hacking is now being pranked, and criminals are just a Disruptive force?

As much as I hate the corporate “come to Jesus”-style notifications, they usually have quite a bit less BS than this. When a company is hacked, and data lost, I expect a number of things:

  1. I want to know what was lost, specifically. Was it just my name and e-mail address? A hashed password? If so, how was it hashed? Where was the salt stored? How many records were lost?
  2. What was the root cause? Was a system not patched? Did an administrator use a password of password1? Did the founder just give the list to their buddy?
  3. Who was responsible? Was this an organized campaign by a foreign nation? Some jerk running metasploit and selling the information to others?
  4. What is being done to make sure this never happens again? Saying things like “we’re strengthening our security measures… (blah blah blah)” is not sufficient. If you had taken security seriously before, you would have had those strengthened security measures set up in the first place. Oh, so NOW you realize that security is important. As a customer, I want to know specifically what is being done. No generalities anymore.

As an organization that customers put their trust in with their personal information, the data breach exposes the fact that you are in fact not trustworthy, and the onus on you to earn back that trust. The points above are a good start, but in general, you need to be honest and transparent when you alert your customers as soon as possible. If your lawyers are telling you to delay notification or hide facts from the public, it’s time to get new lawyers.

After the Zappos breach in January 2012, I sent a letter to the company asking for clarification on their existing security practices and the nature of the data lost:

First, the Zappos website states that “[you] also encrypt payment information traveling within our company as well. All payment information is encrypted while in storage within a network that is firewalled off from the rest of the company and the internet.”. I don’t understand how the last four digits of my credit card number (clearly, “payment information”) could have been disclosed if they were encrypted, unless the cryptographic keys were also disclosed.

Second, the notification e-mail mentions that my password is “cryptographically scrambled”. As I’m sure you know, there is a world of difference between weak and strong methods of cryptographic hashing. Which method of hashing was used, and was a per-user and/or static salt used to further protect the passwords? This is important because many users re-use passwords between sites, and users need to know whether they need to change their passwords on all sites or not.

Third, your website also mentions in a few areas that you use the Trustwave Trusted Commerce Seal as an “assurance that [you] use industry standard measures to secure [my] personal information”. The image is from 2007 and I cannot find any active links showing current Trustwave certification. Did Zappos have current certification from Trustwave at the time of the breach?

Finally, and probably the most important. Has Zappos undergone regular, external penetration tests on your critical systems? Were the systems breached included in these security assessments? Was the root cause of the breach a zero-day / APT-style attack, out of date patches, insider attack, lack of policy, or something else? Your customers need to understand if Zappos is trustworthy enough to continue doing business with, and prompt disclosure if a good first step, the devil is in the details, and the world is watching. I would be happy to discuss these matters under NDA, though for the benefit of your users, I would hope that you would consider public disclosure in the best interests of the company.

I received the following, totally unhelpful response.

Thank you for contacting the Zappos.com Customer Loyalty Team.

We are currently cooperating with the FBI in an ongoing investigation, including undergoing digital forensics. We sincerely apologize that we have been unable to answer your questions.

The email communication that was sent to you by our CEO was also sent to our employees. Here at Zappos, our customers come first, as soon as we are able to provide more information we will let you know.

As always, please remember that Zappos.com will never ask you for personal or account information in an e-mail.

To stay up-to-date on all current information regarding this situation, please see:
www.zappos.com/passwordchange

Sincerely,
The Zappos.com Customer Loyalty Team

Not surprisingly, nothing new has been posted to the link above since January 20th.

Unfortunately, I see only two ways of disclosure moving in this direction:

  • Regulation. The only reason that companies tell their customers anything is that they’re required to by law. They don’t have your best interests in mind, and they don’t really feel sorry for the breach. Stronger regulations that require more detailed disclosure would go a long way toward informing customers of the actual risk they face. In addition, if monetary damages were included, perhaps companies in general would more appropriately fund security programs. If Sony knew they would have had to pay $250 to each customer lost, for each of the 75 million records lost, don’t you think they would have invested a bit more in their security program?
  • Loss of Customers. Hardly a day goes by when some company needs to alert customers of a data breach. Familiarity breeds apathy in this regard, and the outrage that followed the CardSystems and TJ MAXX breaches has become only a dull groan of displeasure. If customers immediately ceased to do business with any company that loses their records, it would also increase (quite significantly) the cost of a data breach to the company.

I’ve included the full text of the e-mail received from TEDxBigApple.

Apologies from TEDxBigApple…


We’ve been hacked!


As you know, Feb 4th was centered around Disruptive Ideas, and as poetic justice would have it, our success means we have been unfortunately pranked by a Disruptive force. Someone or someones surreptitiously gained access to our registered database and has sent out an invitation to join a site called biapplepulse.com. We would like to be clear that this site is in no way affiliated with TED, TEDx, or TEDxBigApple. If you received this email we sincerely apologize. As a precautionary step you may want to block all emails coming from an address ending with @bigapplepulse.com, but that is entirely up to you.

 

All information pertaining to TEDxBigApple will come from info@tedxbigapple.com and noone else. If you receive any messages from third parties please feel free to inform us and we will investigate the source of the problem.

 

We hope that you have been enjoying seeing some photos of the event, and we are working hard to bring you all the videos by the end of next week!

 

In the meantime if you would like to be removed from our email list we will be sad, but of course respect your wishes. Your information and involvement with TEDxBigApple means a lot to us and we hope that you will continue to be a part of our events moving forward.

Let’s strengthen the innovation community together.

Warmly,
-TEDxBigApple Team

Permanent link to this article: http://negativefoo.org/2012/02/how-to-say-youve-been-hacked-in-a-good-way/