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Approx 12,700 non-US customer card numbers and expiration dates stolen from SOE

V_Ben

Banned
http://www.soe.com/securityupdate/

As previously announced, we have been conducting an ongoing, thorough investigation stemming from the cyber attack in April and promised to notify you should there be any changes to the situation.

We issued a press release today outlining these details. We will promptly send a customer service notification via email to all of our impacted account holders whose customer data may have been stolen as a result of an illegal intrusion on our systems. This information was discovered less than 24 hours ago and in response, we took down our services until we could verify their security.

SOE is committed to delivering secure, stable and entertaining games for players of all ages and we're working around the clock to ensure this situation is resolved as quickly as possible. We deeply regret the inconvenience this has caused and appreciate your continued patience and feedback.

Sincerely,
Sony Online Entertainment

Customer Service Notification
May 2, 2011

Dear Valued Sony Online Entertainment Customer:
Our ongoing investigation of illegal intrusions into Sony Online Entertainment systems has discovered that hackers may have obtained personal customer information from SOE systems. We are today advising you that the personal information you provided us in connection with your SOE account may have been stolen in a cyber-attack. Stolen information includes, to the extent you provided it to us, the following: name, address (city, state, zip, country), email address, gender, birthdate, phone number, login name and hashed password.

Customers outside the United States should be advised that we further discovered evidence that information from an outdated database from 2007 containing approximately 12,700 non-US customer credit or debit card numbers and expiration dates (but not credit card security codes) and about 10,700 direct debit records listing bank account numbers of certain customers in Germany, Austria, Netherlands and Spain may have also been obtained - we will be notifying each of those customers promptly.

There is no evidence that our main credit card database was compromised. It is in a completely separate and secured environment.

We had previously believed that SOE customer data had not been obtained in the cyber-attacks on the company, but on May 1st we concluded that SOE account information may have been stolen and we are notifying you as soon as possible.

We apologize for the inconvenience caused by the attack and as a result, we have:

1) Temporarily turned off all SOE game services;

2) Engaged an outside, recognized security firm to conduct a full and complete investigation into what happened; and

3) Quickly taken steps to enhance security and strengthen our network infrastructure to provide you with greater protection of your personal information.


We greatly appreciate your patience, understanding and goodwill as we do whatever it takes to resolve these issues as quickly and efficiently as practicable.

For your security, we encourage you to be especially aware of email, telephone, and postal mail scams that ask for personal or sensitive information. Sony will not contact you in any way, including by email, asking for your credit card number, social security number or other personally identifiable information. If you are asked for this information, you can be confident Sony is not the entity asking. When SOE's services are fully restored, we strongly recommend that you log on and change your password. Additionally, if you use your Station or SOE game account name or password for other unrelated services or accounts, we strongly recommend that you change them, as well.

To protect against possible identity theft or other financial loss, we encourage you to remain vigilant, to review your account statements and to monitor your credit reports. We are providing the following information for those who wish to consider it:

U.S. residents are entitled under U.S. law to one free credit report annually from each of the three major credit bureaus. To order your free credit report, visit www.annualcreditreport.com or call toll-free (877) 322-8228.

We have also provided names and contact information for the three major U.S. credit bureaus below. At no charge, U.S. residents can have these credit bureaus place a "fraud alert" on your file that alerts creditors to take additional steps to verify your identity prior to granting credit in your name. This service can make it more difficult for someone to get credit in your name. Note, however, that because it tells creditors to follow certain procedures to protect you, it also may delay your ability to obtain credit while the agency verifies your identity. As soon as one credit bureau confirms your fraud alert, the others are notified to place fraud alerts on your file. Should you wish to place a fraud alert, or should you have any questions regarding your credit report, please contact any one of the agencies listed below.

Experian: 888-397-3742; www.experian.com; P.O. Box 9532, Allen, TX 75013
Equifax: 800-525-6285; www.equifax.com; P.O. Box 740241, Atlanta, GA 30374-0241
TransUnion: 800-680-7289; www.transunion.com; Fraud Victim Assistance Division, P.O. Box 6790, Fullerton, CA 92834-6790

You may wish to visit the web site of the U.S. Federal Trade Commission at www.consumer.gov/idtheft or reach the FTC at 1-877-382-4357 or 600 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20580 for further information about how to protect yourself from identity theft. Your state Attorney General may also have advice on preventing identity theft, and you should report instances of known or suspected identity theft to law enforcement, your State Attorney General, and the FTC. For North Carolina residents, the Attorney General can be contacted at 9001 Mail Service Center, Raleigh, NC 27699-9001; telephone (877) 566-7226; or www.ncdoj.gov. For Maryland residents, the Attorney General can be contacted at 200 St. Paul Place, 16th Floor, Baltimore, MD 21202; telephone: (888) 743-0023; or www.oag.state.md.us.

We are committed to helping our customers protect their personal data and we will provide a complimentary offering to assist users in enrolling in identity theft protection services and/or similar programs. The implementation will be at a local level and further details will be made available shortly in regions in which such programs are commonly utilized.

We thank you for your patience as we complete our investigation of this incident, and we regret any inconvenience. Our teams are working around the clock on this, and services will be restored as soon as possible. Sony takes information protection very seriously and will continue to work to ensure that additional measures are taken to protect personally identifiable information. Providing quality and secure entertainment services to our customers is our utmost priority. Please contact us at 1 (866) 436-6698 should you have any additional questions.
Sincerely,

Sony Online Entertainment LLC

Good grief. Remember, this is SOE, not PSN. So, keep the "Sony is doomed" stuff out of here, it doesn't contribute to rational discussion in the slightest.

This is not a second attack.
 

BeeDog

Member
I don't recall ever playing a SOE-developed game. Well, except for Gripshift, which they published. Am I safe in that case?

This is perhaps worrying for those who played Free Realms, or?
 
Apart from the
Customers outside the United States should be advised that we further discovered evidence that information from an outdated database from 2007 containing approximately 12,700 non-US customer credit or debit card numbers and expiration dates (but not credit card security codes) and about 10,700 direct debit records listing bank account numbers of certain customers in Germany, Austria, Netherlands and Spain may have also been obtained - we will be notifying each of those customers promptly.
bit, the press release is very US centric, which is odd to me, as the important bit of this, in my opinion, are these 12,700 credit cards.
 

V_Ben

Banned
BeeDog said:
I don't recall ever playing a SOE-developed game. Well, except for Gripshift, which they published. Am I safe in that case?

This is perhaps worrying for those who played Free Realms, or?

Did Gripshit ask you for your Credit Card info? :p

Well, the database this stuff was stolen from pre-dates free realms.
 

BeeDog

Member
V_Ben said:
Did Gripshit ask you for your Credit Card info? :p

Well, the database this stuff was stolen from pre-dates free realms.

True enough, I guess. I couldn't recall whether or not Gripshift used any specific SOE-related online features, so...
 

Alx

Member
If the database is from 2007, the credit cards would have expired already, wouldn't they ?
The bank account numbers may be more worrying...
 
Jinfash said:
A second attack?!

No. OP missed this part:
As previously announced, we have been conducting an ongoing, thorough investigation stemming from the cyber attack in April and promised to notify you should there be any changes to the situation.

We issued a press release today outlining these details. We will promptly send a customer service notification via email to all of our impacted account holders whose customer data may have been stolen as a result of an illegal intrusion on our systems. This information was discovered less than 24 hours ago and in response, we took down our services until we could verify their security.

SOE is committed to delivering secure, stable and entertaining games for players of all ages and we're working around the clock to ensure this situation is resolved as quickly as possible. We deeply regret the inconvenience this has caused and appreciate your continued patience and feedback.

Sincerely,
Sony Online Entertainment

Seems they just extended the investigation to SOE and found this.
 

JWong

Banned
Sony is a big target with huge intentions for hackers, but I think they're going after everyone eventually.

With the FBI going after 40 anon and some already taken down in UK, it's really a heated battle.
 

notworksafe

Member
Last time I played an SOE game and paid for it was around 2005 so I think I'm safe.

EDIT: Oh it's from a years old database and only has info for non-US customers? Probably should put that in the OP title.
 

Wario64

works for Gamestop (lol)
Don't worry Sony, all is forgiven now right

0117_kn7c.gif
 

Garjon

Member
Wow,
Though I should have expected SOE to use the same level/type of security as PSN, so I'm not that surprised; doesn't change how much of a disaster this whole intrusion business has been for Sony.
However, this actually brings something else up: Sony know exactly whose CC details had been leaked, so does this confirm they know the exact details of the stolen CC info (if any) on PSN (there's a lot of FUD about in the media these past few days)?

Hopefully those affected get their emails quickly and can cancel their card before anything bad happens.
 

Htown

STOP SHITTING ON MY MOTHER'S HEADSTONE
spats said:
Why even bother, nobody plays SOE games anyway.
Yeah nobody ever played Everquest or Star Wars Galaxies or DC Universe Online.

Oh. Wait.

No, I meant the opposite of that.
 

Darklord

Banned
notworksafe said:
You are safe unless you live outside the US and played it in 2007.

Err, is there anyway you can check when you last used a CC? I played Star Wars Galaxies ages ago. It might have been around 2007, 07 or earlier definitely.
 

xelios

Universal Access can be found under System Preferences
Geez, do I need to cancel my main debit/credit cards and get new numbers?
 

MrDaravon

Member
Metalmurphy said:

That's even worse, since that means this happened in the initial attack and they just discovered it in the last 24 hours. Fuck, that's actually considerably worse now that I think about it.
 
What's the normal expiration time on credit cards?

Mine says 2012 and I got it last year I think.

SailorDaravon said:
That's even worse, since that means this happened in the initial attack and they just discovered it in the last 24 hours. Fuck, that's actually considerably worse now that I think about it.
Seems they only extended the search to SOE recently when they shut down the servers. (yesterday?)

They must have found something on the initial investigation leading to this.
 

V_Ben

Banned
I'll be surprised is SCE ever lets SOE near PSN again after this, except to publish the odd thing. They can't do any damage that way.
 

notworksafe

Member
xelios said:
Geez, do I need to cancel my main debit/credit cards and get new numbers?
Do you live outside the US and use the same credit card number you used on an SOE game in 2007 or earlier?
 

xelios

Universal Access can be found under System Preferences
notworksafe said:
Do live outside the US and use the same credit card number you used on an SOE game in 2007 or earlier?

No but between this and PSN, who knows the limit of the #s they actually got, to be honest. I'd rather be safe. Gonna just change em up.
 
Metalmurphy said:
What's the normal expiration time on credit cards?

Mine says 2012 and I got it last year I think.
It depends I think. VISA debit cards (yes not a credit card, but similar ultimately) can last for at least 4 years. Just got one last week that doesn't expire until 2015.
 

notworksafe

Member
xelios said:
No but between this and PSN, who knows the limit of the #s they actually got, to be honest. I'd rather be safe. Gonna just change em up.
Well...Sony does. That's why they are telling us exactly how many were taken.
 

shintoki

sparkle this bitch
Can't say I like this since I don't recall my passwords for SOE. CC is annoying but okay, the personal info is worrying.
 

THE:MILKMAN

Member
I assume these "security holes" that have exposed SOE/PSN do not apply to for example SonyStyle online shop?

I mean, wouldn't these hackers immediately try other Sony online stores?
 
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