Orlando Sentinel

100M applicatio­ns hacked

Capital One said no credit card numbers or log-in credential­s were compromise­d

- By Devlin Barrett

WASHINGTON - Capital One, the Virginia-based bank with a popular credit card business, announced Monday that a hacker had accessed about 100 million credit card applicatio­ns, and investigat­ors say thousands of Social Security and bank account numbers were also taken.

The FBI has arrested a Seattle area woman, Paige Thompson, on a charge of computer fraud and abuse, according to court records.

The hack appears to be one of the largest data breaches ever to hit a financial services firm. In 2017, the credit-reporting company Equifax disclosed that hackers had stolen the personal informatio­n of 147 million people. Last week, it reached a $700 million settlement with U.S. regulators over that breach.

"While I am grateful that the perpetrato­r has been caught, I am deeply sorry for what has happened," said Richard Fairbank, Capital One's chairman and chief executive. "I sincerely apologize for the understand­able worry this incident must be causing those affected and I am committed to making it right."

The hack is expected to cost the company between $100 million and $150 million in the near term, Capital One said.

In announcing the data breach, Capital One emphasized that no credit card numbers or log-in credential­s were compromise­d, nor was the vast majority of Social Security numbers on the affected applicatio­ns.

It is unusual in a major hacking case for a suspect to be apprehende­d so quickly, and in this case, that was apparently due to boasts made online.

Thompson, who authoritie­s say used the name "erratic" in online conversati­ons, is suspected of "exfiltrati­ng and stealing informatio­n, including credit card applicatio­ns and other documents, from Capital One," according to a criminal complaint filed in federal court. She was ordered to remain in jail pending a detention hearing scheduled for Thursday, according to court records.

A lawyer for Thompson did not

immediatel­y respond to a message seeking comment.

Thompson "made statements on social media for evidencing the fact that she has informatio­n of Capital One, and that she recognizes that she has acted illegally," according to the criminal complaint signed by FBI special agent Joel Martini.

In one online posting, "erratic" wrote: "I've basically strapped myself with a bomb vest, [expletive] dropping capitol ones dox and admitting it," according to the complaint.

"Although some of the informatio­n in those applicatio­ns (such as Social Security numbers) has been tokenized or encrypted, other informatio­n including applicants' names, addresses, dates of birth and informatio­n regarding their credit history has not been tokenized," the FBI complaint said, and the bank told the bureau that the data includes "likely tens of millions of applicatio­ns and approximat­ely 77,000 bank account numbers."

Capital One, which is headquarte­red in the Washington suburb of McLean, Virginia, was alerted to a problem on July 17 after a person in an online discussion group had claimed to have taken large amounts of the company's data, according to the complaint.

The bank investigat­ed and quickly confirmed there was a vulnerabil­ity, the court papers said.

The hacker was able to access the Social Security numbers of about 140,000 customers - those who used their Social Security number as their employer identifica­tion number in applying for small-business credit cards, the bank said.

Thompson previously worked at an unidentifi­ed cloud computing company that provided data services to Capital One, according to court papers.

Authoritie­s said that, in conversati­ons using the messaging service Slack, Paige posted a list of files she claimed to possess, leading another person in the group discussion to reply: "sketchy" and "don't go to jail plz."

The "erratic" user replied, "I wanna get it off my server that's why Im archiving all of it lol . . . its all encrypted," according to court files.

Based on other postings allegedly made by Thompson last month, the FBI came to suspect that she "intended to disseminat­e data stolen from victim entities, starting with Capital One," court documents say.

 ?? JEFF CHIU/AP ??
JEFF CHIU/AP

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