


Allstate Insurance Sued For Delivering Personal Info In Plaintext (theregister.com) 20
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Register: New York State has sued Allstate Insurance for operating websites so badly designed they would deliver personal information in plain-text to anyone that went looking for it. The data was lifted from Allstate's National General business unit, which ran a website for consumers who wanted to get a quote for a policy. That task required users to input a name and address, and once that info was entered, the site searched a LexisNexis Risk Solutions database for data on anyone who lived at the address provided. The results of that search would then appear on a screen that included the driver's license number (DLN) for the given name and address, plus "names of any other drivers identified as potentially living at that consumer's address, and the entire DLNs of those other drivers."
Naturally, miscreants used the system to mine for people's personal information for fraud. "National General intentionally built these tools to automatically populate consumers' entire DLNs in plain text -- in other words, fully exposed on the face of the quoting websites -- during the quoting process," the court documents [PDF] state. "Not surprisingly, attackers identified this vulnerability and targeted these quoting tools as an easy way to access the DLNs of many New Yorkers," according to the lawsuit. The digital thieves then used this information to "submit fraudulent claims for pandemic and unemployment benefits," we're told. ... [B]y the time the insurer resolved the mess, crooks had built bots that harvested at least 12,000 individuals' driver's license numbers from the quote-generating site.
Naturally, miscreants used the system to mine for people's personal information for fraud. "National General intentionally built these tools to automatically populate consumers' entire DLNs in plain text -- in other words, fully exposed on the face of the quoting websites -- during the quoting process," the court documents [PDF] state. "Not surprisingly, attackers identified this vulnerability and targeted these quoting tools as an easy way to access the DLNs of many New Yorkers," according to the lawsuit. The digital thieves then used this information to "submit fraudulent claims for pandemic and unemployment benefits," we're told. ... [B]y the time the insurer resolved the mess, crooks had built bots that harvested at least 12,000 individuals' driver's license numbers from the quote-generating site.
I'm sincerely asking this... (Score:3)
...When the state, or any governing body, sues a company like Allstate, where does that money go?
Re: (Score:1)
Elon's pockets?
Business as usual - Equifax 147 million people (Score:2)
For reference, there's not been a major company or credit reporting agency go out of business due to losing people's information.
Some state regulator, based on a systemic loss of personal data by a company, wholesale prevent that company from doing any business in that state for its products and its parent/sub companies products.
it's business as usual and often the general liability insurance of the company will pay the fine.
For Equifax, it was $2.89 per person affected in fines plus whatever it cost for 'f
Re:I'm sincerely asking this... (Score:4, Informative)
If you know your company is breaking the law, it pays to report it. Be sure to save documentation (which you should be doing anyway).
Re: (Score:2)
The bigger issue here (Score:2)
⦠is why a private company is able to have access to this data in the first place.
Voter Fraud (Score:2)
Easy way to commit voter fraud. Past residents are likely still listed because they didn't change their voter registration. Since checking voter IDs is somehow racist, this leak gives someone everything they need to vote early and vote often.
Re: (Score:2)
Since checking voter IDs is somehow racist
You don't have access to a search engine? Explain to us how you're qualified to be on Slashdot when you can't navigate the internet.
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, plus the ID requirements are kinda more difficult to meet if you're from certain minorities that, for example, didn't have access to normal mainstream healthcare at the time many were born (say, if you were black and in most of the South before the 1970s. No, it didn't all get fixed overnight when the Civil Rights Act was passed.) Where do you get your birth certificate in that instance? You have to hope your parents had the foresight to make sure you had everything and kept copies for you when you ne
At least 12,000 individuals? (Score:4, Insightful)
LexisNexis (Score:2)
Are we sure this is Allstate's fault? (Score:2)
It looks like Allstate does have a real problem with their website allowing anyone to use them as a proxy lookup. Nevertheless:
That sentence suggests that LexisNexis has all the information in question, and they sell it to others. Allstate doesn't appear to be The Problem here, at least as far as I can tell from the
That's nothing. (Score:2)
You need a DL to exist? (Score:2)
Well, that will make life simpler for a lot of people.
What was that old ad? (Score:2)
Oh yeah, I remember. It was "You're in Groping Hands with Allstate". Sounds about right.
my letter (Score:2)
I got a letter in the mail from my insurance company. It was in plaintext. How dare they! From now on I want letters to use ROT13.
I guess my personal info (Score:1)
Wasn't in good hands