The New York-based credit-card processor left a server without password protection for approximately three weeks.
Paay, a New York-based card payment processor, failed to enable a password on a server storing personal information related to some 2.5 million consumer transactions. The server was open to the Internet for approximately three weeks before being pulled offline once Paay was notified of the open server.
According to TechCrunch, the records contained the full plaintext credit card number, expiry date, amount spent, and a partially masked copy of each credit card number. No consumer names or CVCC numbers were in the records. Paay's CEO says the configuration error came in a transition between servers.
"Unfortunately, Paay's misconfiguration is quite common and we've grown used to seeing these data exposures pop up in headlines every couple of weeks," says Chris DeRamus, CTO and co-founder of DivvyCloud. "The friction you hear about between security professionals and developers generally stems from a reliance on runtime security which, in turn, makes it more likely that developers will try to circumvent security altogether, leading to, you guessed it, more misconfigurations."
Read more here.
A listing of free products and services compiled for Dark Reading by Omdia analysts to help meet the challenges of COVID-19.
About the Author(s)
You May Also Like
Securing Code in the Age of AI
April 24, 2024Beyond Spam Filters and Firewalls: Preventing Business Email Compromises in the Modern Enterprise
April 30, 2024Key Findings from the State of AppSec Report 2024
May 7, 2024Is AI Identifying Threats to Your Network?
May 14, 2024Where and Why Threat Intelligence Makes Sense for Your Enterprise Security Strategy
May 15, 2024
Black Hat USA - August 3-8 - Learn More
August 3, 2024Cybersecurity's Hottest New Technologies: What You Need To Know
March 21, 2024