Rumors have been circulating since December that a Russian had hacked into eBay databases. Screenshots of discussion-board posts by eBay moderators that were composed and signed by "Vladuz" were posted by eBay members as proof that the hacker had accessed eBay email accounts. An eBay spokesperson did not respond to an inquiry made by AuctionBytes last month looking for information about the alleged hacking incident.
But a small group of eBay users kept discussing the Vladuz matter online. On Wednesday, eBay finally responded to an inquiry from the Register in the UK and acknowledged that someone had obtained access to a small number of eBay email accounts (http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/02/20/ebay_conspiracy).
eBay spokesperson Hani Durzy told AuctionBytes on Wednesday that at no time did the fraudster have access to any member's personal or financial information. Durzy said a Romanian had obtained access to a handful of email accounts from some customer service representatives. The only information he had access to was information contained in emails, which did include some screenshots of some backend tools, Durzy said. Email servers are kept separate from servers hosting member data, he said.
eBay has a policy that prohibits employees from putting customers' financial information in emails, such as credit card numbers or social security numbers (street addresses do not fall under that policy, Durzy said, since that is already in the public domain). eBay customer service representatives are trained about what they can and can't put in emails.
Durzy claims the perpetrator was a "known Romanian fraudster" going by the handle Vladuz. "Our number one priority is to see him caught and locked up," Durzy said.
Over the past few weeks, eBay had removed multiple threads from its discussion boards in which members discussed the Vladuz incident, including on its German and UK sites. But users kept the pressure on eBay by discussing Vladuz on their own sites that sport such quirky names as FireMeg.blogspot.com, PheeBay.com and eBayMotorsSucks.com. Durzy said eBay forum threads were removed because they included the screenshots that had been obtained illegally. "We do not allow people to link to that information on our boards."
Asked why eBay did not address member concerns in the discussion boards, Durzy said it would not be appropriate for him to comment on a specific case, but said eBay makes decisions that are in the interest of the marketplace as a whole.
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I'm not sure I read what you read in that article. Maybe if I held my monitor over a candel some secret message appears. Never the less, not one single major US news service covers the story and eBay's stock remains unaffected.
Isn't it amazing how the sky can fall and some folks never realize it fell.
Really Bored wrote:Never the less, not one single major US news service covers the story and eBay's stock remains unaffected.
So this makes it ok? This does not stop the fact that ebay was hacked and ebay ignored this issue, pulling several threads on the boards related to this topic. With the money ebay has I am sure it is quite easy to make sure things like this remain out of the major news headlines.
It isn't the fact ebay was hacked. Websites get hacked daily. It is how they handle such issues. Ignore the issue, pull posts and threads related to the issue and suspend those who talk about it. Typical Meg Whitman style. If the public doesn't know about it, it never happened.
With the money ebay has I am sure it is quite easy to make sure things like this remain out of the major news headlines.
Ah! That explains it... I knew there had to be an answer. EBay bought off CNN, MSNBC, Fox, CBS, BBC, Washington Post, New York Times, ABC, Reuters, AP, etc..
Maybe the majors don't feel it's news worthy. It's not like the whole world evolves around eBay. Only a paid shill, share holder or cult member would think that.
Of course it couldn't be that the majors CEO's may have stock in the company and don't want it to tank, could it?
lieworld wrote: Maybe the majors don't feel it's news worthy.
Aha! That explains it... I knew there had to be an answer. One of the top websites in the world gets hacked, millions of credit cards are compromised, and CNN, MSNBC, Fox, CBS, BBC, Washington Post, New York Times, ABC, Reuters, AP, etc., don't care.
I guess the sky really did fall. So what, nobody cares!!!
You are half right. You don't seem to care ebay was hacked. Ebay doesn't care that they were hacked. People like Sandy and Clinic don't care and like you and ebay, probably think "oh well". But to state "nobody" cares is incorrect. There are several of us here that care.
I care that ebay was hacked. I am concerned that ebay tried to sweep the issue under the carpet and ignore it. I am concerned that ebay was pulling posts and threads from other concerned people that were trying to get an answer from ebay about this issue.
Are you upset with the fact I don't put as much stock in internet rumors as you? I don't get my news off internet chat boards... I guess I'm more of a cynic than you.
I can find you tons of websites that claim to prove the CIA engineered the 9/11 attacks. If I give you links to them will you accept their word as gospel?
Me, I'm brainwashed into believing that if a major site like eBay was hacked there wouldn't be any way of hiding it. All the major news media would be making their lead story.
There are also people that are brainwashed into believing every conspiracy theory that comes down the pipe on eBay. They grasp it with both hands and will do anything to argue it's validity. The press has been bought off, or the press doesn't care, ect.. A conspiracy theory is a delicate thing, you can't hold it up to the light of reason and expect it to survive for long.
Really Bored wrote: "Are you upset with the fact I don't put as much stock in internet rumors as you? I don't get my news off internet chat boards"
Did you read the newstory in the original post? If not, let me quote a section of the article:
"On Wednesday, eBay finally responded to an inquiry from the Register in the UK and acknowledged that someone had obtained access to a small number of eBay email accounts"
It appears this was NOT an "internet rumor" as you put it.
Per Merriam-Webster online, the word acknowledged means: "to recognize as genuine or valid"
284dan wrote: Really Bored wrote: "Are you upset with the fact I don't put as much stock in internet rumors as you? I don't get my news off internet chat boards"
Did you read the newstory in the original post? If not, let me quote a section of the article:
"On Wednesday, eBay finally responded to an inquiry from the Register in the UK and acknowledged that someone had obtained access to a small number of eBay email accounts"
It appears this was NOT an "internet rumor" as you put it.
Per Merriam-Webster online, the word acknowledged means: "to recognize as genuine or valid"
First IT had to be in English. Now the English reports are just rumors, eh, bored troll? Think back to the sleazebay word incident...
BTW, I first posted this here from the original alert way back in October about this, as soon as I found IT on Docs ebay motors sucks site.
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CAPP Consumers Against PayPal Policies - Exposing the sleazery of sleazebay and painpal
Why do you feel it is some sort of crusade? Just looks like a group of people on a chat board who want to discuss the issues and like to warn others of the downside of ebay and their cohorts.
I'm not sure I read what you read in that article.
We read this. Lots of people did.
Even more suspicious, according to AuctionBytes, is the recent removal of a link from an eBay forum that exposed account holders' names, addresses, and user names and passwords. Indeed, eBay officials appeared to have purged an entire forum thread where conspiracy theorists were discussing the vast cover up. (A capture of a more recent thread can be found here.
Why we're still not reading it on an E-bay forum is ODD though! hmm.
I think you should invite some friends over to help you out.