In response to the news that Telefonica has suffered a data breach which exposed the details of millions of Spanish users, Rob Shapland, IT security experts commented below.
Rob Shapland, Principle Cyber Security Consultant at Falanx Group:
Flaws like this are quite common in websites. It does imply that the website has not been tested against industry best practice as the flaw that was exploited should be easily discovered during penetration testing. It could also be that Telefonica made changes to the system without running additional checks, which then introduced the vulnerability.
Customers who have been affected should update their password on Telefonica’s systems (and any other websites that same password was used), just in case passwords were exposed, though there is no evidence of this at this stage. It would also be prudent for customers to update their security questions on any key websites such as online banking, in case the personal info that was stolen could be used to answer these questions.”
Ryan Wilk, Vice President at NuData Security:
“For years now, many top merchants and financial institutions have incorporated passive and active biometrics and behavioural analytics to verify customer identities online. By analysing hundreds of indicators derived from the user’s online behaviour, companies don’t have to rely on passwords, payment data, and other leaked information to make an authentication decision. Removing the organisation’s reliance on ‘things users know’, companies are far less vulnerable to the data exposed by leaks and breaches.
“Passive biometric technology cannot be mimicked by hackers, and helps break the chain of perpetual fraud that grows whenever customer data is breached and stolen.”