The complexity of federal and state regulation has some operators thinking twice, including Facebook and Microsoft, both of which ditched their currencies. By Linda Punch When federal prosecutors in May shut down digital-currency network Liberty Reserve on money-laundering charges, all eyes turned to other peer-to-peer digital currencies, such as Bitcoin …
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Liberty Reserve Case Exemplifies New Focus by Prosecutors on Digital Currency
The shutdown of digital-currency network Liberty Reserve by federal prosecutors on money-laundering charges is part of the increased focus on the virtual-currency market by regulators and law enforcement agencies, but doesn’t necessarily mean all such currencies face the same fate. While Liberty Reserve shared some common features with Bitcoin …
Read More »New Study Documents the Outsize Fraud Exposure from Mobile Payments
Even though merchants accepting mobile payments are in the minority and mobile-payment volume is low, losses from fraud incidents for those merchants are higher than for non-mobile-accepting merchants, according to the fourth annual “LexisNexis True Cost of Fraud” study sponsored by content provider LexisNexis Risk Solutions and conducted by Javelin …
Read More »Security Notes Cautionary Notes on the Smart-Phone Age
Gideon Samid • Gideon@AGSgo.com Yesterday’s visionaries shocked their audience by proclaiming a distant reality of “a phone in every home.” Today’s visionaries proclaim “a home in every phone.” And an office too, and with it your school, your movie theatre, your bank! Computers, entertainment systems, …
Read More »Though Zappos Case Gets ’12 off to Gloomy Start, Number of Card Records Breached Fell in 2011
Despite a seemingly non-stop parade of headlines about data breaches last year, the number of credit and debit card records compromised actually fell, according to new figures from the Identity Theft Resource Center. The ITRC says it identified 111 data breaches that exposed 3.38 million records in 2011. n In …
Read More »Security: Spam’s Merchant-Acquirer Chokepoint
By Peter Lucas Spam e-mail may be a constant irritant to consumers, but it’s big business for merchant acquirers willing to settle transactions resulting from those unsolicited ads. Can anything be done to stop it? Every day some unsuspecting consumer receives an unsolicited e-mail from …
Read More »Prepaid Cards’ Big Bullseye
Can the fast pace of innovation that has characterized the prepaid card sector in recent years continue as lawmakers and regulators increasingly target the business? By Linda Punch After years of skirting the edges of the industry, the prepaid card market finally is getting a toehold in the mainstream of …
Read More »Data Breaches Stabilize in 2010, But There’s an Asterisk
At first glance, a review of the data-breach scene in 2010 shows signs of improvement, or at least stabilization, according to figures from the Identity Theft Resource Center (ITRC). Although the total number of reported breaches increased to 662 from 498 in 2009, the number of records known to have …
Read More »A Social Media Paradox: Sites Are Popular, But Users Aren’t Happy
While social media sites are wildly popular with consumers, it turns out those same users give the sites low scores for satisfaction, ranking the category above only airlines and cable and satellite TV providers, according to a report released on Tuesday. Still, that dissatisfaction is unlikely to affect payments processors …
Read More »Study Quantifies the Heavy Damage of Card Data Breaches
Everyone knows data breaches are expensive and affect a lot of people, but just how much is startling. In a new analysis, Javelin Strategy & Research estimates credit and debit card issuers spent $252.7 million in 2009 replacing more than 70 million cards compromised by data breaches. Analyst Robert Vamosi …
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