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Also last year, the Justice Department announced additional charges against Gonzalez and others for hacking retail companies' computers for the theft of approximately 40 million credit cards. At the time, that was believed to be the biggest single case of hacking private computer networks to steal credit card data, puncturing the electronic defenses of retailers including T.J. Maxx, Barnes & Noble, Sports Authority and OfficeMax. Prosecutors charge Gonzalez was the ringleader of the hackers in that case. At the time of those charges, officials said the alleged thieves weren't computer geniuses, just opportunists who used a technique called "wardriving," which involved cruising through different areas with a laptop computer and looking for accessible wireless Internet signals. Once they located a vulnerable network, they installed so-called "sniffer programs" that captured credit and debit card numbers as they moved through a retailer's processing networks. Gonzalez faces a possible life sentence if convicted in that case. Restaurants are among the most common targets for hackers, experts said, because they often fail to update their antivirus software and other computer security systems. Scott Christie, a former federal prosecutor now in private practice in New Jersey, said the case shows that despite the best efforts by companies to protect data privacy, there are still individuals capable of sneaking in. "Cases like this do cause companies to sit up and take notice that this is a problem and more needs to be done," said Christie.
[Associated
Press;
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