Amazon shuts social engineering hole

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Phone call no longer enough.

Amazon will no longer allow people to change credit card and email addresses for customers' accounts over the telephone, after a devastating hack on a journalist last week.

Amazon shuts social engineering hole

Wired reported that Amazon had quietly changed its policy on Monday.

Before the change, people could change account details as long as they were able to identify themselves by name, email address and mailing address.

Those pieces of information are easily found online, and were used by two hackers to gain access and take control of reporter Mat Honan's Amazon account through a simple phone call.

Once the Amazon account had been compromised and hackers knew the last four digits of his credit card number, they were able to trick Apple's customer service into believing they were dealing with Honan himself.

In the ensuing hack, the attackers remotely wiped Honan's laptop, iPad and iPhone, losing irreplacable data. His Twitter account was also compromised, along with a number of email accounts.

"In the space of an hour, my entire digital life was destroyed," Honan said in the aftermath of the attack.

According to Honan's account of the hack, those involved in the attack had purely used social engineering techniques — convincing people to hand over key information — rather than any technical hacks.

Honan and Wired were able to replicate the steps leading to the hack up until Tuesday, when Amazon closed the security hole without announcement.

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