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Tipster’s email led to arrest in massive Capital One breach

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Capital One Financial Corp. set up an email address for tipsters — including “white hat” hackers — to alert the company to potential vulnerabilities in its computer systems. On July 17, the company got a hit.

“Hello there,” the email said, according to federal prosecutors. “There appears to be some leaked s3 data of yours in someone’s github/gist.” A link was provided to an account at GitHub, a company that allows users to manage and store project revisions, mostly related to software development.

It didn’t take Capital One long to figure out who had accessed its files. The GitHub address included a name, Paige Thompson, a former Amazon.com Inc. employee who used the online nickname “erratic” and discussed her exploits with others, according to federal prosecutors.

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“I’ve basically strapped myself with a bomb vest, ... dropping capitol ones dox and admitting it,” Thompson allegedly wrote, under the “erratic“ alias, in a June 18 Twitter message. “There ssns...with full name and dob” — an apparent reference to Social Security numbers.

Damage assessment

It also didn’t take Capital One much time to assess the damage. On Monday, it announced that about 100 million people in the U.S. had been affected by the breach, and an additional 6 million in Canada. The illegally accessed data, which were stored on servers rented from Amazon Web Services, were primarily related to credit card applications and included personal information, such as names, addresses and dates of birth, and some financial information, including self-reported income and credit scores.

Most Social Security numbers were protected, but about 140,000 were compromised, the bank said. Capital One said it was “unlikely that the information was used for fraud or disseminated by this individual.”

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The company described the tipster to the hack as an “external security researcher.”

Thompson, 33, was charged with computer fraud and abuse. In a court hearing Monday, she broke down and laid her head on the defense table.

The scale of the breach ranks it as possibly one of the largest-ever affecting a U.S. bank, although the consequences may be limited if the data weren’t distributed to others or used for fraud.

Capital One shares fell as much as 6.5% on Tuesday morning, their biggest decline in six months.

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Security lapses

The breach shows how hackers can steal vast troves of consumer data as the result of lapses by the companies that collect it. In 2017, Equifax Inc. failed to patch a known flaw in its servers, resulting in the theft of 145 million Social Security numbers, along with the names and dates of birth of possibly a third of the U.S. population.

In the Capital One case, vast buckets of personal data were exposed to hacking because of an improperly configured firewall — among the most basic digital security tools. The bank said it immediately fixed the problem once it was discovered.

In a complaint filed Monday in Seattle, prosecutors said that Thompson accessed the data at various times between March 12 and July 17. A file on her GitHub account, time-stamped April 21, contained a list of more than 700 folders and buckets of data, according to prosecutors.

The Capital One data had been stored on servers the company contracted from a cloud computing company that isn’t identified, though the charges against Thompson refer to information stored on S3, a reference to Amazon Web Services’ popular data storage software.

An Amazon Web Services spokesman confirmed that the company’s cloud had stored the Capital One data that were allegedly stolen, and said the data weren’t accessed through a breach or vulnerability in its systems.

Cloud advocate

Capital One has been one of the most vocal advocates for using cloud services among banks. The lender has said it is migrating an increasing percentage of its applications and data to the cloud and plans to completely exit its data centers by the end of 2020. The move will help lower costs, the company has said.

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The lender has been the subject of several case studies published by Amazon Web Services that noted the cloud services provider has helped Capital One develop new technologies faster and improve certain services including its call center.

“We have embraced the public cloud and are well on our way to migrating our applications and data to the cloud,” Chief Executive Richard Fairbank told analysts on a conference call in April. “We are now considered one of the most cloud forward companies in the world.”

Thompson, previously an Amazon Web Services employee, last worked at Amazon in 2016, a spokesman said. The breach described by Capital One didn’t require insider knowledge, he said.

‘Wa wa wa’

Much of what could be learned about Thompson this week was information she had posted online. On her GitHub account, she was writing code dealing with the Onion Router, or Tor, an anonymity tool that allows users to conceal their identities. Capital One investigators determined that Thompson used it in her hack of the bank, according to federal prosecutors.

In online interactions, Thompson suggested she was careful to hide her digital tracks with various security tools, including Tor. But the federal complaint against her outlines relatively simple ways Capital One and the FBI were able to establish her identity, including the name on her GitHub page.

Thompson was active in the hacking community on Twitter, and she wrote recently about struggling emotionally, and about euthanizing her beloved cat.

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On June 27, “erratic” posted about several companies, including Capital One, in an online group, according to court records.

“don’t go to jail plz,” another user wrote.

“Wa wa wa wa, wa wa wa wa wa wa wawaaaaaaaaaaaa,” Thompson responded, and later added, “I just don’t want it around though. I gotta find somewhere to store it.”

On July 29, FBI agents executed a warrant to search Thompson’s residence. In one bedroom, they said, they found digital devices with files that referenced Capital One and its cloud computing company. The devices also included the alias “erratic.”

Andrew Martin, Matt Day and Michael Riley contributed to this report.

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