Sinlung /
29 April 2011

PlayStation Hackers: We’ve Got 2.2M Credit Cards

Users report fraud, but it may be coincidence

By Matt Cantor

sony playstation
A customer watches a monitor showing Sony's PlayStation 3 at a Tokyo electric shop.

Chatting in online forums, hackers are citing a huge haul from the attack on Sony’s PlayStation Network:

They claim they now have access to some 2.2 million credit cards.

The assertion can’t be verified, say experts—but a number of users are reporting suspicious charges on their cards.

Still, that could be pure coincidence, notes the
Guardian; any large enough sample of credit card users will contain some fraud victims.

The hackers say they even have credit card security codes, but Sony says that’s not possible: "Your credit card security code has not been obtained because we never requested it," the company tells users.

Among the fraud claims: some $1,500 in purchases from a German grocery store using a US credit card, as well as dozens of claims regarding charges from Japanese shops and German airlines.

Hackers are also saying they offered to sell the user database back to Sony, but the firm said no.

A Sony rep says he had no knowledge of any such occurrence.

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