Information Security
Write an analytical report describing the impact of the breach on the organizations involved.
Submission Requirements:
Submit your answers in a one- to two-page Microsoft Word document using APA style. Include references as necessary. Submit the document to your instructor as an attachment through the Questa Learning Plan.
Use 12-point, Arial font, and double spacing in your Microsoft Word document.
Analysis 1.1
Case Study
1
In March 2010, 28 year-old Albert Gonzalez was sentenced to 20 years in federal prison for breaching
security measures at several well-known retailers and stealing millions of credit card numbers, which he then
resold across a variety of shadow “carding” Web sites. Using a fairly simple packet sniffer, Gonzalez was able
to steal payment card transaction data in real time, which he then parked on blind servers in places such as
Latvia and Ukraine—countries formerly part of the Soviet Union. Gonzalez named his activities “Operation
Get Rich or Die Tryin'” and lived a lavish lifestyle by selling stolen credit card information. He was eventually
tracked down by the U.S. Secret Service, which was investigating the stolen card ring. Operation Get Rich or
Die Tryin' took place for more than two years and cost major retailers, such as TJX, OfficeMax, Barnes &
Noble, Heartland, and Hannaford, more than $200 million in losses and recovery costs. It is the largest
computer crime case ever prosecuted.
At first glance, Operation Get Rich or Die Tryin' seems to be an open-and-shut case. A hacker commits a
series of cybercrimes, is caught, and is successfully prosecuted. Fault and blame are assigned to the
cybercriminal, and justice is served for the corporations and the millions of people whose credit card
information was compromised.
Unless you ask the shareholders, banking partners, and some customers of TJX, who filed a series of class-
action lawsuits against the company claiming that the “high-level deficiencies” in its security practices make it
at least partially responsible for the damages caused by Albert Gonzalez and his accomplices. The lawsuits
point out, for example, that the packet sniffer Gonzalez attached to the TJX network went unnoticed for more
than seven months. Court documents also indicate that TJX failed to notice more than 80 GB of stored data
being transferred from its servers using TJX’s own high-speed network. Finally, an audit performed by TJX’s
payment-card processing partners found that it was noncompliant with 9 of the 12 requirements for secure
payment card transactions. TJX’s core information security policies were found to be so ineffective that the
judge presiding over sentencing hearing of Gonzalez reviewed them to determine whether TJX’s damages
claim against him of $171 million is valid.
Apart from lawsuits, TJX faced a serious backlash from customers and the media when the details of the
scope of the breaches trickled out. Customers reacted angrily when they learned that nearly six weeks had
passed between the discovery of the breach and its notification to the public. News organizations ran
headline stories that painted a picture of TJX as a clueless and uncaring company. Consumer organizations
openly warned people not to shop at TJX stores. TJX’s reputation and brand image was shattered in the
wake of Operation Get Rich or Die Tryin', and only a small portion of the damage was actually Albert
Gonzalez’s fault.
NT2580: Week 1 Understanding IT Infrastructure Security
Analysis 1.1
Case Study
2
The real lesson of Operation Get Rich or Die Tryin' may not be the crime itself, but how a lackluster security
policy was chiefly responsible for it happening in the first place.
Source: David, K., & Solomon, M. G. (2010). Fundamentals of information systems security (1st ed.).
Sudbury, MA: Jones & Bartlett