UPDATE: Western Union Site Found Unprotected by Hacker

Western Union, Englewood, CO, discovered recently that customer credit and debit card data had been accessed by a hacker who found part of its Web site unprotected. The site was accidentally left unprotected by Western Union systems employees who had performed maintenance on it before the break-in.


"When we realized what happened, our first focus was protecting our customers," said company spokesman Peter Ziverts. "We began contacting them Saturday by telephone, e-mail and Mailgram."


While customers were being alerted, Western Union disabled its Web site and launched an investigation, Ziverts said.


On Sept. 10, the affected credit and debit card numbers were transmitted to the appropriate financial institutions to alert them to the possibility of credit card fraud. Visa International and MasterCard International are monitoring all the accounts in question for fraudulent activity, Ziverts said.


He added that a maximum of 15,700 account numbers were stolen but declined to release the number of names on the Western Union online database.


At press time, the hacker had not been identified, and no cases of credit card fraud had been reported.


Before the break-in, Western Union planned an official launch of its Web site this month. Ziverts said that as a result of the hacking, the official launch will be pushed back.


"We believe that this still is and will be a very viable business for us," Ziverts added.


Western Union, a money transfer and electronic payment company, is a unit of First Data Corp., Atlanta, which provides debit, credit and merchant transaction processing services.

Sign up to our newsletters

Follow us on Twitter @dmnews

Latest Jobs:

More in News

USPS Offers Discount on Samples

USPS Offers Discount on Samples

The Postal Service offers 5% off trial-sized samples in an attempt to get more CPG companies to try sampling.

Marketing News Bytes: May 23, 2013

Marketing News Bytes: May 23, 2013

Updates on companies, products, and people

Apologies for Earlier Newsletter

Dear Readers: An earlier version of today's newsletter was sent with broken links. We apologize for this and have since resolved the issue. The links in this new version are working. Thanks for your understanding and we hope you enjoy today's newsletter.