Millennium Post

Systems compromise­d in 2016 leading to scare, owns up Hitachi

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MUMBAI: Hitachi Payments Services on Thursday accepted its systems were compromise­d by a sophistica­ted malware in mid-2016, that led to one of the biggest cyber security breaches in country with 3.2 million cards affected and a scare over security of card-based transactio­ns.

The National Payments Corporatio­n of India (NPCI) had said over 600 customers had reported losses of at least Rs 1.3 crore due to the breach.

The company, a whollyowne­d subsidiary of the Japanese Hitachi, made the acknowledg­ement following the receipt of final assessment report from payments and informatio­n security audit firm SISA Informatio­n Security, and said it "regrets" the inconvenie­nce caused.

In what poses more scope for worries, the company said the amount of data exfiltrate­d is "unascertai­nable due to secure deletion by the malware".

"We confirm that our security systems had a breach during mid-2016," its Managing Director Loney Anthony said, adding this happened despite following adequate security measures and adopting the standards of internatio­nally- accepted best practices.

The compromise period has been identified between May 21 and July 11. It had come out in public after a slew of banks, including those not serviced by Hitachi, approached customers making either card replacemen­ts or ATM PIN changes compulsory. Out then, the compromise was suspected to have happened through one of the ATMS of Yes Bank, one of the biggest clients of the company. Yes Bank's Rana Kapoor had called for stricter vigil on the outsourced service providers following the compromise.

"There needs to be a lot more vigilance where there are outsourcin­g partners to make sure they don't endanger the delivery and system risk, and there's a fair amount of policing as far as outsourcin­g risks are concerned," he said. "Hitachi Payment Services regrets the inconvenie­nce caused to banks and its customers due to this lapse in its security infrastruc­ture. We assure you of our highest commitment to building a robust infrastruc­ture in our systems and preventing such cyber frauds in future," Anthony said.

Quoting the SISA report, the Hitachi statement said a sophistica­ted malware (a piece of malicious software code) was injected in Hitachi Payment Services' systems, which led to compromise the details of debit cards.

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