UK Bank TSB Admits 1,300 Accounts Hit By Fraud Amid IT Meltdown (bbc.com) 28
An anonymous reader shares a BBC report: Life savings have been stolen from TSB accounts by fraudsters "exploiting" the bank's IT problems, with 1,300 people losing money. On occasions, people were waiting on the phone for up to nine hours to report cases, the bank's boss Paul Pester has told MPs. He said that 70 times the normal level of fraud attacks were seen last month. The introduction of a new IT system in April left customers struggling to make transactions and see their balances. The bank said it would compensate customers in full for any fraud they suffered. The evidence came after the financial regulator confirmed that it was investigating TSB and criticised Mr Pester for an "optimistic view" of services after the meltdown.
Re:I'm Sticking With TSB (Score:4, Informative)
1300 / 70 = ~19 (Score:3)
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If it was your personal account it would be a 100% failure. Why are you trying to make it seem less incompetent and damaging then it actually is? Do you have a personal interest in promoting electronic theft?
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If you're a bank, I'd think (hope!) that you have 0 successful attacks per month, and hope that you have a rounded 0.0 successful attacks per year.
Also, you'd want to weight them per customer. Someone successfully grabbing an account from a rooted unprotected cell phone is NOT the same thing as grabbing all of the accounts from the mainframe even though they're both a "single" attack.
GDPR?... (Score:2)
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The bank lost the money. The still owes the customers their funds. The customers only loose if the bank goes out of business.
Customers generally don't lose when the bank goes out of business because of deposit protection. They generally do lose when they authorize the transfer of funds to a fraudster, although in this case customers may be luckier than usual because the bank is partly at fault for not having enough people to answer the phone.
It's just getting worse isn't it? (Score:2)
The best part of the summary? (Score:2)
"The bank said it would compensate customers in full for any fraud they suffered."
I believe my solicitors may have a slight difference of opinion of the number of significant digits of compensation...
dog bites man; contract law falls off turnip truck (Score:2)
Dog bites man. Contract law falls off turnip truck. Learned-helplessness porn, FTW. You know, could you grab a brain, please?
How about this, instead?
I'm sure there's a nasty time gap between pronto and ASAP, because numerical restitutio
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If anybody is keeping their 'life savings' in a bank they're doing it wrong. A bank is a place to keep working funds, not life savings. Anything you have in a bank is losing money to inflation. It's not working for you, it's working for the bank.
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This just isn't true. In cases of identity theft the direct financial cost is almost always born by either the banks or the credit card companies.
It is the indirect financial cost which is born by the victim. This typically is the inability to procure future loans due to erroneously damaged credit history caused by the thief. Civil problems due to fraudulent contracts signed by the thief which must be litigated and such.
The direct financial cost is covered in the U.S..