Access member only content, take part in discussions with comments on blogs, news and reviews and receive all the latest security industry news directly to your inbox. Join now for free.
A confirmation email has been sent to your email address - SUPPLIED EMAIL HERE. Please click on the link in the email to verify your email address. You need to verify your email before you can start posting.
If you do not receive your confirmation email within the next few minutes, it may be because the email has been captured by a junk mail filter. Please ensure you add the domain @scmagazine.com.au to your white-listed senders.
Soap retailer Lush has urged customers in Australia and New Zealand to cancel their credit cards after revealing the brand's local websites were breached.
It pulled its websites offline today and replaced them with a "privacy breach" message indicating that online shoppers' personal information "may have been obtained by the hackers".
Lush Australasia director Mark Lincoln later told ABC News that the company's online customer database had been stolen.
He also told ABC News that customers were not informed that their credit card details would be retained by the company and stored in a database.
The Payment Card Industry compact to protect cardholders and their banks known as PCI DSS sets basic rules for accepting, storing and handling credit card details. These included keeping the credit card numbers for only as long as is necessary, usually just the time it takes to complete the transaction, and encrypting data as it is transmitted and when it is at rest.
Many online stores use merchant gateways or an intermediary such as PayPal and never see the cardholders' details.
It was unclear if Lush was in breach of its online merchant agreement and would face sanction from its issuing financial institution.
"Lush is working with the police, forensic investigators and banks and doing all that we can to investigate the breach of privacy," it said.
"We are currently in the process of contacting each of our online customers individually by email."
Lush said it was in the process of carrying out "further security checks" in a bid to determine the extent of the breach.
However, it denied the hack was linked to an attack on the retailer's UK website in late January, other than to say that its site had also been targeted by hackers.
- additional reporting by Nate Cochrane
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.