Graphics Programs Uncover Secret PINs 363
Errtu76 writes "The BBC is running a story stating that, among other programs, The Gimp and Photoshop have been identified as possible tools for uncovering PINs via the mail." From the article: "The researchers collected lots of so-called Pin mailers and then tested how secure they were. Many were defeated using bright lights shone at an angle on to the paper. Other Pins could be read by scanning the letter and then adjusting some of the image qualities in popular programs such as GIMP, Adobe Photoshop and Paintshop Pro."
It's become sentient (Score:5, Funny)
Re:It's become sentient (Score:2, Funny)
Re:It's become sentient (Score:2)
Re:It's become sentient (Score:2)
Re:It's become sentient (Score:2, Funny)
1 out of 2 (Score:2, Funny)
Re:1 out of 2 (Score:5, Insightful)
Unfortunately, I think your point is going to be lost on some people.
While the article certainly has a point in pointing out the problem, at least in this scenario the criminal has to hit his targets old school: manually and one-at-a-time. This is a time-consuming, slow process that forces them to be in the geographic neighborhood of their victims.
I am more concerned about security privacy issues with data stored online, where you can hack a database 3,000 miles away and get 10 million PINs in an afternoon. Now *that's* an increase in productivity.
Re:1 out of 2 (Score:4, Funny)
rus
Re:1 out of 2 (Score:5, Funny)
Re:1 out of 2 (Score:4, Funny)
Which begs the really Zen-like question:
"If a password is not in use, is it really a password or just a bunch of letters and numbers (and whatever else you use)?"
Neighbors (Score:2)
This is very true. But lets not forget one of the oldest scams in the book. Ship bogus credit card products to an abandoned location with instructions to leave at the door. Only, with this, you could ship products to your neighbor's house (when you know they won't be there) with that neighbor's credit card and proper pin.
Because the number, pin, and address were all to the same person, it makes it much harder on the car
Re:1 out of 2 (Score:3, Funny)
Let's get cracking.
Criminal (Score:5, Insightful)
When did a criminal get this sudden hit of "oh my- what am I doing- I can't _OPEN_ this letter! I'll just scan it and see what i can find". This is someone who already intercepted mail and is about to commit fraud. Just open the envelope and call it a day.
FYI: From the Canada Post Corporation Act
Re:Criminal (Score:5, Insightful)
Because you want the victim to actually recieve the letter, activate the card and not be suspicious. Otherwise you'll just have the PIN of an inactive credit card, which is worth squat/zip/nada.
Mailing the PIN and relying on that it will arrive unread is an important part of the chain of trust on credit cards.
Re:Criminal (Score:2)
So as opposed to getting a credit card number (using your example), buying something, and ridding yourself of the card, you're going to hang on to the number and make purchases over the course of time and hope nobody notices stores they don't normally shop at on the list?
In general it sounds like we're talking about really dumb cr
Re:Criminal (Score:2)
When you buy something in a shop, you put the card in a machine, enter the PIN number, and if the machine says the number is right, it takes your money and you take your goods.
Re:Criminal (Score:2)
And, IMHO, it's less secure than a signiture. Most shops have got these little PIN entry devices that allow anyone standing anywhere behind you to get a really good look at what your number is. Muggers now don't have to even be able to write; just to remember 4 numbers and leave the store.
If they could get the PIN entry secure, it would be a good system..
Re:Criminal (Score:2)
I'll have you know, I sign at least 50% of my Visa slips 'Daffy Duck' 'Bugs Bunny' 'root' 'whoami' and so on. The first two being the most amusing. Nobody checks it. The 15 year old operating the cash at the movie theatre throws it right into a drawer. The 17 year old at the clothing stores I shop at do the same. Nobody look
Don't tell me... (Score:5, Funny)
Better recourse (Score:5, Interesting)
And the fact that if your info gets out and someone exploits it, it is such a hassle to clear your good name/credit.
That being said- locks only keep honest men out... In the military locks are known as "delaying devices"
If someone wants your info, and are willing to break out the scanner and start graphics manipulation to get it, well, they are likely to get it. But wouldn't it just be easier to hit strangers about the head with a sock of nickels and take their cash?
Re:Better recourse (Score:3)
I think the "delaying devices" is exactly the key to their usefulness though. Every bit of difficulty in cirvumventing a device is useful in making it less worth a criminal's time to bypass it.
Sometimes I get the sense from the Slashdot crowd that something isn't worth doing because perfection is impossible, perfect security being a prime example. I would like to ask, does that mean we quit using secur
Re:Better recourse (Score:3, Insightful)
I believe you and I are on the same page. My point is, that no security is perfect. Not that it means we shouldn't secure our possesions, but rather that if someone really wants something, and is willing to go to any means to get it, then they are likely to succeed...
My point was tha
Re:Better recourse (Score:2)
Some slashdotters may rail against anything other than perfect security, but I think a fair amount of Slashdot vitriol is directed at security measures that are disproportionate in impact or cost compared with the risks they are nominally intended to mitigate.
Re:Better recourse (Score:5, Insightful)
An honest man keeps himself out.
Re:Better recourse (Score:2)
Re:Better recourse (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Better recourse (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Better recourse (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Better recourse (Score:4, Interesting)
Hopefully though, this discovery will further bring to light all the lax security that companies that control our personal information have. It would be nice to see data brokers and banks start to care about security a little more.
Heh. Hopefully.
More likely, it will bring calls to limit these nefarious tools that can be used for criminal purposes. We already are paranoid about color printers running off images of dollar bills. Now we'd better make laws saying that any image processing program must contain checks against this sort of thing.
I will not be surprised if that response is seriously proposed.
Hell, under the DMCA, it may be illegal to download Gimp now. After all, it is a tool that has been demonstrated to break an effective security measure (the paper around a PIN number), although the PIN number may not be IP and thus may not be covered under the DMCA.
But we also have the Grokster case as precedent to allow us to hold the Gimp developers responsible for this use of their tool.
-Rob
Re:Better recourse (Score:2)
And the fact that if your info gets out and someone exploits it, it is such a hassle to clear your good name/credit.
But thats the point. It's hassle to you. It don't affect the bottom line
Or if it does it's not enougth to get worked up about
Re:Better recourse (Score:4, Funny)
Hitting strangers with a sock of nickels isn't Slashdot worthy. Hiting them with a sock full of RFID identification tags is.
Other ways (Score:2)
And hence.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Nothing to see here... yet again.
Re:And hence.. (Score:2)
Maybe it's just me, but I think you're missing the point of TFA.
Re:And hence..MOD PARENT FUNNY (Score:2)
Scratch-off lottery tickets? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Scratch-off lottery tickets? (Score:5, Interesting)
Something similar happened at least once. It took two people. One at the store to pull the reel of tickets and one with access to some medical machine. They looked through the roll with the medical scanner, took out and bought the winning tickets and put the broken up roll back. They were caught when someone else at the store noticed that the roll had several odd breaks. And probably that someone was a little too lucky.
Re:Scratch-off lottery tickets? (Score:2)
Securely store or shred (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Securely store or shred (Score:2)
Re:Securely store or shred (Score:2)
But if you get a good shredder (one of those diagonal cross cut ones for instance) it can be a total bitch to get the stuff back together.
Re:Securely store or shred (Score:2)
Re:Securely store or shred (Score:2)
People say I am a looney, but I don't know. Who is to say anyone will even look at my windows anyway?
Re:Securely store or shred (Score:2)
And the carbons and whatnot are carefully filed in the trash together.
Going through your trash, I might get something interesting.
Going through a restaurant's or other store's trash, odds are I'll get many interesting things.
Re:Securely store or shred (Score:2)
In America, or abroad?
two sheets of mylar (Score:5, Interesting)
The existing patterned ink method was adopted because of cost, but really, tacking some mylar onto the form would be cheaper than tacking those thick plastic fake credit cards into those credit offers they flood you with. Yeah, I know: marketing budget can afford fake credit cards but the operations budget can't afford mylar for security.
Re:two sheets of mylar (Score:5, Funny)
How well does it work at blocking CIA mind-control rays? I'm worried that my tinfoil hat isn't up to the task against their post-9/11 spy satellite upgrades.
Re:two sheets of mylar (Score:3, Funny)
Re:two sheets of mylar (Score:5, Informative)
Re:two sheets of mylar (Score:2)
When dealing with that kind of information, I'd be happy to spend an extra $0.05 on the mailer....
Next you'll tell us... (Score:5, Insightful)
PIN codes are just there to protect a person's card from random pickpocketing. Also this "exploit" needs access to the mail containing the PIN , before the user reads it and changes it. It is very unlikely that somebody will be able to do this easily - the obvious suspects being your kid brother who signed for your credit card when it came at your home and your shopping crazy sister. It needs very clear physical access on day-to-day basis.
This belongs in the same category as mothers steaming opening letters - maybe you should read Saki's shock tactics about how to handle that scenario.
Overhyped title (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem is not with the gimp or photoshop, but poor printing techniques that could put your 'secure' password information at risk with the simplest of methods. It still deserves a mention in YRO because I've even had a few letters mailed to me with PIN information like this. The letter had already been partially broken on one side due to handling, and I could see the PIN in the sunlight through the thin sheet even though that thin sheet is meant to let you know if someone has tampered with your information.
Re:Overhyped title (Score:2)
Kind of silly (Score:2, Insightful)
So they can steal your mail? If they've stolen it, why not just open it and read the pin?
If someone is targetting you to steal your money, they would have to steal the pin number and then check back every day to see if the card came. Doesn't seem very practical to me.
Re:Kind of silly (Score:2, Interesting)
Perhaps they could intercept your mail, obtain your PIN, place the letter back in your mailbox (so you have no reason to be on your guard or change your PIN), follow you carefully into town, steal your wallet (maybe without you knowing, but a simple mugging would do) ...
Far fetched? Depends on whether this little security hole becomes well known in the wrong circles. Also, where I work the same kind of system is use to protect wage-slips - which have employee payroll numbers, bank details, social securit
Re:Kind of silly (Score:2)
UK Banks (Score:3, Interesting)
I can see them taking the same attitude towards PINs. Any abuse must be the customer's fault, since no one else could have known the PIN.
Re:UK Banks (Score:2)
Nothing new, really. (Score:4, Interesting)
They were able to see through the enveloppe obfuscation using a slide projector as a bright light (and undoubtely a fair number of aspirins).
Simpsons did it (Score:2)
H - Man, that Yodel was so good..I wish I was eating it right now..
A better way.... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:A better way.... (Score:2)
An even better way of reading the PIN is to open up the envelope and look inside. One doesn't even need a computer for that.
Except, as soon as you've broken the seal you've effectively announced to the intended victim: "Beware! Your PIN has been compromised!"
The usual /. Spin (Score:2, Funny)
"All your pin are belong to GIMP!"
This has nothing to do with the graphics programs and everything to do with bad-quality printing methods.
My 100% effective solution (Score:2, Funny)
Just Great! (Score:2, Funny)
If some has my Personal Identification Number Number, they may use it in an Automatic Teller Machine Machine.
Re:Just Great! (Score:2)
If some has my Personal Identification Number Number, they may use it in an Automatic Teller Machine Machine.
This being a UK story, would they use the ATM Machine at the Trustee Savings Bank Bank?!
(The TSB was renamed to "TSB Bank" back in the 1980s, as a precursor to something or other boring and pointless)
Re:Just Great! (Score:2)
Lloyds Bank now own TSB so it's actually Lloyds TSB now
Dammit, your right. And Lloyds Trustee Savings Bank Bank had far more comedy potential... dammit!
Incidentally, I believe it was TSB wanting to shake off its Trustee status and become a fully fledged bank - that could merge/be taken over by other banks - that prompted the original change from TSB to TSB Bank?
DUSTER! (Score:5, Interesting)
Aim this coolant at a sealed envelope and it makes the paper transparent.
Re:DUSTER! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:DUSTER! (Score:2)
I THINK I'M ON TO SOMETHING HERE ! (Score:2)
God! someone should *DO* something about this
Gee
Re:I THINK I'M ON TO SOMETHING HERE ! (Score:2)
If you hold a sealed envelope, over boiling water, it OPENS! Once it opens, if you close it back up and place it under a book, it will RESEAL!
Not the PIN mailers in the UK - you need to either tear open the sealed envelope *inside* the outer envelope (which, I concede, could maybe be steamed open), or you need to GIMP the whole shebang (I feel durty just saying that...)
Re:I THINK I'M ON TO SOMETHING HERE ! (Score:2)
My point is more along the lines of its illegal to tamper with mail in any way, the methods of which you use are immaterial.
In order to 'scan' the PIN number out, they first have to have illegal possession of your mail, or work for the post i suppose.
Re:I THINK I'M ON TO SOMETHING HERE ! (Score:2)
Fair point. My point was more that these tossers are going to act illegally anyway - might as well force them to reveal their misdeeds (tear the envelope)... but I suspect we're circuitously agreeing with each other ;-)
Dr Nick (Score:5, Funny)
"If you're unsure about something, rub it against a piece of paper. If the paper turns clear, its your window to weight gain!"
Have fun eating greasy chicken and stealing PIN numbers
/ Thats right, I said PIN Number.
Re:Dr Nick (Score:2)
RFC - SPIT and the digitalisation of all paper (Score:2, Funny)
With all the fuss over identity theft and so forth, I propose SPIT ( Spit on PDA Id Tracking )which boils down to a Pocket PC's which you SPIT on. After your spit has been authenticated, you can use your snot key to decrypt all documents which were previously paper based!
Please feel free to contri
Other Forensic uses for Photoshop and GIMP (Score:2)
And it goes a little something like this... (Score:2, Informative)
Breaking news: Image manipulation programs used. . (Score:2, Redundant)
Oh my god! (Score:2)
Everyone panic and flail their arms about, screaming!!
So what? (Score:2)
Newsflash: At my office, I can even OPEN UP the inter-office envelopes in the outgoing mail bins and see EVERYTHING inside! Heck, I don't need the gimp or anything, and there is no evidence of tampering.
Other ways of reading the PINs (Score:3, Informative)
Other, easier ways include spraying the envelope with automotive-freon. The envelope becomes transparent while wet, and within seconds the freon completely evaporates.
Other inventive ideas: Use a strand of high quality fiber optics to have a peek inside.
Point being, wouldnt it be far more sensible to NOT include the PIN ?!?! Duh.
That's all we need... (Score:2, Funny)
ego inflation (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Mail security? (Score:2)
Re:Mail security? (Score:2)
Re:Mail security? (Score:2)
Most thefts occur in the Post Office.
Re:Bah. (Score:2)
Redundancy, geddit? Geddit?
I'm truly sorry...
Re:Bah. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:This wouldn't even be an issue.... (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:PIN Number (Score:4, Funny)
Re:PIN Number (Score:3)
Re:PIN Number (Score:2)
Re:PIN Number (Score:2)
Re:PIN Number (Score:2)
A bit like the SCSI controllers where there's a SCSI interface that plugs into the machine, then a SCSI interface that connects to a plain vanilla ST506-type drive...
Re:PIN Number (Score:2)
Re:Provide PIN over the phone? (Score:3, Informative)
Faking a caller line ID is easy. Any modern PBX syste
Re:Applicability to "Scratch and Save" Coupons? (Score:4, Informative)
I guess what you are talking about is where the data is printed then covered with a scratch off layer. This technology is common for lottery cards but I have never heard of it being used for PINs. Here you need to see through this layer to get at the data underneath, so the tricks mentioned in the report won't work.
(I am one of the authors of the report)