It is remarkable how time has changed the ways of the world. Frank Piccolo, a longtime Omaha florist, remembers getting orders for bouquets just by writing down the entire customer’s information, this includes the customer’s credit card number.
“Looking back at those days, at how insecure credit card privacy was, it’s amazing,” Piccolo said. “You had all kinds of people having access to orders with these numbers on them.”
At present, Teleflora’s secure point-of-sale network is used by Piccolo’s flower shops to process sales, and more importantly customers’ credit card information is no longer kept at the shop or on its computers, Piccolo said.
“It’s not in anything that anybody could come back a few hours later and get their hands on,” Piccolo said.
Hackers break into retail sales networks and sell credit card numbers on the black market and keeping credit card numbers off retailers’ servers will shoot up their strategy.
First Data and PayPal are just two of the number of firms who fights the hackers in Omaha but it isn’t a easy game to win.
When the payment processor says, “I’m going to build a bigger wall,” the hacker says, “I’m going to build a bigger slingshot,” said Cliff Gray, who consults on payment data security for an Omaha-based company, the Strawhecker Group.
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