The measure follows reports of use of stolen card data mainly in the US and China Credit: REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui Indian banks have asked customers to change the PINs, and in some cases blocked access, to 3.2 million debit cards after concerns about a security breach.The issue surfaced in September when some banks complained that their customers’ cards were used fraudulently mainly in China and the U.S. while the account holders were in India, the National Payments Corporation of India said late Thursday.India’s top government-controlled bank, the State Bank of India, said earlier this week that after card network companies like Visa and MasterCard had informed various banks of a potential risk to some cards because of a data breach, it had taken the precautionary measure of blocking the cards identified by the networks.The bank said it was in the process of issuing new cards and assured its customers that its own systems were not compromised. A spokeswoman for India’s central bank, the Reserve Bank of India, did not deny the issue but said the RBI has not yet decided to discuss it publicly.Initial reports suggested that hackers had accessed the data through malware on automated teller machines. “Apprehending that this could be a case of card data compromise, all the ATMs / PoS terminals in India and three card networks – RuPay, Visa and MasterCard worked in a collaborative manner in the month of September 2016,” NPCI said in a statement. It was subsequently established that there was a possible compromise at one bank’s payment switch that ran the back end of ATMs. The name of the bank or the payment switch provider have not been disclosed.Some 640 customers of 19 banks were found to have been directly affected, and about 13 million rupees (US$194,800) were defrauded. Banks have advised their customers to change their debit card PIN.In cases where customers could not be contacted, the cards have been blocked and fresh cards are being issued by member banks. NPCI said it would issue further recommendations to banks soon as investigations continue.“Necessary corrective actions already have been taken and hence there is no reason for bank customers to panic,” said A.P. Hota, CEO of NPCI. The advisory issued by NPCI to banks for “re-cardification is more as a preventive exercise,” he added. Related content news Multibillion-dollar cybersecurity training market fails to fix the supply-demand imbalance Despite money pouring into programs around the world, training organizations have not managed to ensure employment for professionals, while entry-level professionals are finding it hard to land a job By Samira Sarraf Oct 02, 2023 6 mins CSO and CISO CSO and CISO CSO and CISO news Royal family’s website suffers Russia-linked cyberattack Pro-Russian hacker group KillNet took responsibility for the attack days after King Charles condemned the invasion of Ukraine. By Michael Hill Oct 02, 2023 2 mins DDoS Cyberattacks feature 10 things you should know about navigating the dark web A lot can be found in the shadows of the internet from sensitive stolen data to attack tools for sale, the dark web is a trove of risks for enterprises. Here are a few things to know and navigate safely. By Rosalyn Page Oct 02, 2023 13 mins Cybercrime Security news ShadowSyndicate Cybercrime gang has used 7 ransomware families over the past year Researchers from Group-IB believe it's likely the group is an independent affiliate working for multiple ransomware-as-a-service operations By Lucian Constantin Oct 02, 2023 4 mins Hacker Groups Ransomware Cybercrime Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe