By Keith Regan E-Commerce Times
04/06/01 10:39 AM PT
Once it is located in the zShops area, Bibliofind can have payments collected
by Amazon, freeing Bibliofind from having to collect or maintain customer
information.
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A month after announcing that its customers' credit card information
was exposed to hack attacks, Bibliofind.com
said Thursday that it will move its operations to the site of its
parent company, Amazon.com (Nasdaq: AMZN).
Bibliofind informed customers and merchants this week that it will take up
residence in Amazon's Marketplace and zShops areas beginning May 7th.
A spokesman for 5-year-old Waltham, Massachusetts-based Bibliofind, which
connects rare and used booksellers with customers around the world, said
the move had no connection to the revelations that credit card information
had been exposed over a four-month period beginning last October.
"We just see it as the best way to move forward," spokesman Jim Courtovich
told the Associated Press. "It has been in the planning stages for some time."
However, Bibliofind has been unable to use its own payment
system since it announced on March 5th that its secure
servers had been breached.
Stuck in Neutral
Since then, customers have been asked to make arrangements
to pay booksellers directly, which often required offline payment methods.
Once it is located in the zShops area, Bibliofind can
have payments collected by Amazon, freeing Bibliofind from
having to collect or maintain customer information.
Under Investigation
The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) continues to
investigate the breach, Bibliofind said, and all affected
users have been notified by e-mail. Bibliofind said that hackers
may have been able to download the names, addresses and credit
card information of about 98,000 customers.
The e-tailer's hack revelations came not long after computer
products e-tailer Egghead.com said that its servers had been
hacked, though an
investigation later revealed
that no credit card data was exposed.
Around the same time,
hackers infiltrated CreditCards.com,
stole as many as 55,000 credit card numbers and posted them on the Internet.
Big Family
Bibliofind became part of the sprawling Amazon family in
1999 when the e-tail giant bought Exchange.com.
That acquisition was part of a US$645 million
shopping spree
by Amazon that also included Accept.com and Alexa Internet, whose
Web-navigation service has come under fire for tracking users' online movements.
In a departure from Amazon's own privacy policy, Bibliofind
said that it has no plans to transfer existing customer
information to the e-tailer. Last year, causing outcries
from privacy groups, Amazon changed its privacy policy to
give itself and its subsidiaries the right to transfer
customer information in the event of sales, mergers or acquisitions.
Busboy Scam Exposes Web Shopping Dangers March 22, 2001
Many identity thieves collect the
personal verification data required by Web merchants, before a
transaction can be processed, via other online sources where
that credit-related information is stored.
Hack Attack Exposes Web Shopper Credit Card Data March 05, 2001
The escalating number of Internet credit card fraud cases is a concern
for online firms and credit issuers, as well as government agencies
in the U.S. and abroad.
Cracked Egghead Yields E-Commerce Omelet January 10, 2001
Many consumers who know that Net shopping hassles might exist are willing to adjust their shopping habits accordingly.
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