[Dailydave] http://home.hamptonroads.com/stories/story.cfm?story=110889&ran=223062
Nathan Landon
nathan.landon at digitaloperatives.com
Fri Sep 15 14:45:36 EST 2006
Oh, and they also reported that he used a PrePaid Debit Card so they
couldn't track who it belonged to.
This was on Fox News in Virginia. (trustworthy source?)
Nate
On 9/15/06, Nathan Landon <nathan.landon at digitaloperatives.com> wrote:
>
> They showed it on the news here in Virginia. They have security camera
> footage of the guy who they believe is the perpetrator trying to pull out
> $250 and getting $1000. He did this twice apparently. He doesn't look
> like the "engineer" type. They reported that he was able to turn on the
> glitch through a series of entered numbers. Doubtful he knew what he was
> doing otherwise he could have turned it off between attempts.
>
> It took 9 days apparently to catch the error when a good samaritan noticed
> that they got more than they asked for and reported it.
>
> It smells to me that it was either an inside job or a disgruntled
> employee.
>
> Nate
>
> --
>
> Nathan Landon
> President Digital Operatives
> www.digitaloperatives.com
>
>
>
> On 9/15/06, Dave Korn <dave.korn at artimi.com > wrote:
> >
> > On 15 September 2006 12:43, Halvar Flake wrote:
> >
> > > Somebody tell me that the stuff in the subject is
> > > a joke.
> > >
> > > Cheers,
> > > Halvar
> >
> >
> > Hmmf. It comes across as dubious at first sight, but if the guy did get
> > some kind of engineer's access to the ATM, he could perhaps mis-program
> > it as
> > to which kind of bills were loaded into which columns/containers in the
> > cash
> > bay. (Correct me if I'm wrong, but aren't all dollar bills the same
> > size?
> > This approach could not work in the UK where different denominations are
> > of
> > different sizes and need to be loaded into differently-sized cassettes
> > which
> > then automatically cue the machine as to the nature of the notes loaded
> > into
> > them).
> >
> > It also sounds like a garbled reference to 2FA - the swipe card would be
> > a
> > special engineer's identifier, and the "series of numbers" that he
> > entered
> > would not have been "breaking the code", but merely misusing a
> > legitimate
> > authority.
> >
> > I guess we need to see a more technical report before we can reach
> > conclusions, but that's my attempt to read between the lines: it's not a
> > joke,
> > it's just what happens when a non-technical reporter attempts to cover a
> > hi-tech crime story.
> >
> >
> > cheers,
> > DaveK
> > --
> > Can't think of a witty .sigline today....
> >
> > _______________________________________________
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> > Dailydave at lists.immunitysec.com
> > http://lists.immunitysec.com/mailman/listinfo/dailydave
> >
>
>
>
>
>
--
Nathan Landon
President
Digital Operatives
www.digitaloperatives.com
Phone: 808-221-9172
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