Heartland boss calls for industry collaboration

The head of Heartland Payment Systems has called for industry collaboration to combat cybercrime attacks.

The head of Heartland Payment Systems has called for industry collaboration to combat cybercrime attacks.

Following an attack by cybercriminals where a potential 100 million credit card transaction details may have been intercepted, Robert Carr, Heartland's founder, chairman and chief executive officer has called for information sharing to better defend itself.

After cybercriminals planted spy software on Heartland systems, Carr held meetings with others in the payments industry and called for greater information sharing to prevent cybercriminals from using the same or similar techniques in multiple attacks.

Carr said: “I have talked to many payments leaders who are also concerned about the increasing success and frequency of cybercrime attacks. Up to this point, there has been no information sharing, thus empowering cybercriminals to use the same or slightly modified techniques over and over again. I believe that had we known the details about previous intrusions, we might have found and prevented the problem we learned of last week.

“Just as the Tylenol crisis engendered a whole new packaging standard, our aspiration is to use this recent breach incident to help the payments industry find ways to protect its data - and therefore businesses and consumers - much more effectively.”

Despite the negative press caused by the incident, Heartland claimed to have added more than 400 merchants to its client base in the past few days - exceeding results for the same period from last year.

The company is also working towards the industry adoption of end-to-end encryption - which protects data at rest as well as data in motion - as an improved and safer standard of payments security.

See original article on scmagazineus.com
Copyright © SC Magazine, US edition

What are your thoughts on this article? Add your comment below.

To begin commenting right away, you can log in below or register an account if you don't yet have one. Please read our guidelines on commenting. Offending posts will be removed and your access may be suspended. Abusive or obscene language will not be tolerated. The comments below do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of SC Magazine, Haymarket Media or its employees.

NOTE: You must be a registered member of SC Magazine to post a comment.

Click here to login | Click here to register
comments powered by Disqus
Sign up to receive SC Magazine email newsletters
   FOLLOW US...
Most Read