Skip to content


June 25, 2009

TK Maxx owner to pay £5.9m in breach settlement

TJX reaches breach settlement with 41 states

By Jaikumar Vijayan, Computerworld


More than two years after TK Maxx parent company TJX acknowledged that it was hit with a massive data breach, the retailer agreed to boost its security measures and pay 41 US states nearly $10 million (£5.9 million) to cover the costs of investigating the incident.

Advert

Under the terms of the settlement announced yesterday, TJX Companies will pay the states a total of $7.25 (£4.39m) million for the investigations and will also create a $2.5 (£1.51m) million data security fund available to the states for projects that "advance" effective data security and technology, the company said in a statement.

The settlement also requires that TJX certify that its computer systems meets "detailed data security requirements" prescribed by the states, and that it "encourage" the development of new technologies that can better secure payment card data.

TJX, which operates the retail chains like TK Maxx, Marshalls and Bob's Stores, revealed in January 2007 what was widely seen at the time as the biggest breach of payment cards ever. The company had said that at least 45 million cards were exposed in the breach, and that the total could have been as high as 94 million cards.

UK customers were also affected by the data breach.

The payment cards were compromised by intruders who broke into the TJX Companies networks via poorly configured wireless access points at some of its stores in Florida.

In a statement yesterday, TJX insisted that it did not violate any consumer or data protection laws in connection with the breach. The company said it agreed to the settlement because it wanted to "concentrate on its core business without distraction".

To date, 11 people have been charged on ID theft and computer fraud counts in connection with the case, and at least two have pleaded guilty. Three of the 11 are US citizens while the rest are from Estonia, Ukraine, China and Belarus.

TJX had already set aside funds for the to pay settlement and other costs in connection with the incident.

In a statement announcing the settlement, Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley said that TJX has also agreed to upgrade all of its wireless systems to a more secure protocol.

The agreement also requires that TJX limit the time payment card data is stored on its networks, and to isolate the portion of its network carrying payment card data from the corporate network, she added. "This settlement ensures that companies cannot write-off the risk of a data breach as a cost of doing business," Coakley said.

In a similar statement, California Attorney General Edmund Brown Jr. said that investigations determined that the intrusion followed the failure of TJX to address security flaws that were unearthed in a 2004 internal audit. The agreement ensures that the TJX systems will meet highest "contemporary standards," Brown added.

Gartner analyst Avivah Litan criticised the agreement, contending that state governments have no business mandating corporate security requirements.

"I think the AGs are better off focusing on disclosure rules and consumer protection than on security technology," she said. "As soon as the government starts mandating or recommending technologies, like end-to-end encryption, their mandates or recommendations will become out-of-date."

Also considering that consumers did not suffer direct financial harm due to the breach, the attorneys general should have focused instead on "preventing future breaches through enhanced breach disclosure laws and more effective consumer protection laws" Litan said.

Follow highlights from ComputerworldUK on Twitter
Sign up for our Daily Newsletter
The UK IT News widget Get it for your site!

« prev article | more security news | next article »

Advert

close

Email this article to a friend or colleague:




PLEASE NOTE: Your name is used only to let the recipient know who sent the story, and in case of transmission error. Both your name and the recipient's name and address will not be used for any other purpose.

close
  • This article is now being printed.
close

What are your views on this subject? Use the form below to post a comment on this article up to 1000 characters.


Characters remaining:

close

Click below to add 'TK Maxx owner to pay £5.9m in breach settlement - Cybercrime & Hacking - ComputerworldUK' to your blog.



If you do not have a ComputerworldUK Account and would like to use this feature, please Register.

If you are a registered, logged-in user, this will post the title and first paragraph of this story to your blog to share with your readers.

What is this?

Advert

WHITE PAPERS

  • Legal risks: Employee use of the internet and email
    Exploring the challenges facing IT Mangers today and vital steps to ensure safe internet an email use by employees.
  • Phishing for victims
    This White Paper examines the phenomenon of phishing. It explains the potentially catastrophic threat it presents to all kinds of organisation. Exploding some widespread myths, it lights up the murky waters where phishing first emerged and where it continues to evolve. But it also highlights what your business can do to blunt the threat.
  • Challenges and opportunities of PCI
    The control framework implicit in the Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCI DSS) provides an enterprise structure for improving operational, security, and audit performance.
  • Social CRM comes of age
    Who is this “social customer”? What strategies and tools does the new breed of CRM provide to do something about this?
  • Risk Management: Protect and Maximize Stakeholder Value
    What has held organisations back from a broader adoption of risk management programs?
*