Rabu, 03 Februari 2010

ATM Skimmers, Part II

ATM Skimmers, Part II: "

Easily the most-viewed post at krebsonsecurity.com so far has been the entry on a cleverly disguised ATM skimmer found attached to a Citibank ATM in California in late December. Last week, I had a chance to chat with Rick Doten, chief scientist at Lockheed Martin’s Center for Cyber Security Innovation. Doten has built an impressive slide deck on ATM fraud attacks, and pictured below are some of the more interesting images he uses in his presentations.


According to Doten, the U.S. Secret Service estimates that annual losses from ATM fraud totaled about $1 billion in 2008, or about $350,000 each day. Card skimming, where the fraudster affixes a bogus card reader on top of the real reader, accounts for more than 80 percent of ATM fraud, Doten said.


If you have Flash enabled for krebsonsecurity.com, you should see a slideshow below that will cycle through to a new image roughly every 8 seconds. To pause or resume the slideslow, click on the center of the image. To go forward or backwards, click the left or right edge of the slideshow image, respectively. To enlarge the slideshow to full screen mode, hover your mouse on the image until you see a circle with two outward-facing arrows, then double-click.









An ATM skimmer that fits over the card insert slot
An ATM skimmer  panel that fits directly on top of the real ATM
Image at left shows a PIN capture device overlay. The image on the right shows the actual card skimmer attached (right edge)
A closeup of the ATM card skimmer removed from the face of the ATM
Some ATMs are in building lobbies that require visitors to swipe their ATM card at the door. This device was found attached to the reader at a lobby entry. This ATM door skimmer was originally flush with the device. The skimmer and the real reader have been pulled away from the face to better show the two devices.
ATM PIN capture overlay device pulled back to reveal the legitimate PIN entry pad.
A brochure rack was outfitted with a spy camera to record PINs in conjunction wtih a skimmer.
By the end of 2004, 70 percent of all new ATMs shipped worldwide were Windows-based, according to Lockheed's Rick Doten
A Diebold spokesperson estimates that 90 percent of Diebold's global shipments are now Windows-based ATMs -- Rick Doten
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