Indian call center staff sold data, TV show says

By Andy McCue, Special to ZDNet Asia
Friday, October 06, 2006 09:43 AM

An undercover TV investigation claims to have infiltrated criminal gangs selling thousands of U.K. credit card and passport details for as little as US$9.50 each from offshore call centers.

The "Dispatches" documentary, shown on U.K.'s Channel 4, follows a 12-month investigation. It included footage of middlemen offering an undercover reporter the credit card details gleaned from Indian call centers of 100,000 U.K. bank customers.

But Indian IT trade organization Nasscom criticized Channel 4 for refusing to show it any of the footage before it was broadcast on Thursday evening. It urged the program makers to cooperate in rooting out and prosecuting any "corrupt" call center workers.

"The whole issue of data security is a global problem," said Sunil Mehta, a vice president at Nasscom. "There are bad apples in every industry around the world, and these incidents happen in India and the U.K. This is not a widespread problem in India. Security measures and practices that Indian companies have are the best in the world."

Mehta said in the case of recent high-profile incidents of Indian call center security breaches--such as that focused on bank HSBC--the criminals were identified and arrested within three weeks and are now awaiting trial. He also pointed to Indian initiatives such as a national registry designed to vet call center and IT workers and a regulatory body to improve the level of security in the industry.

"India is doing all it can to stay ahead of this," Mehta said. "We need to deal with this."

At the same time, the United Kingdom's largest private-sector trade union, Amicus, is calling for a government committee inquiry into the security of financial-services work being sent overseas to countries such as India.

David Fleming, national secretary of Amicus, said the union has "serious concerns" about the security of overseas call centers and that a clear business case for offshoring has yet to be made.

"We need to look at long-term implications for the U.K. economy," Fleming said in a statement. "To date, there is no evidence to suggest that offshoring benefits customers. But there is evidence that shows the negative effect of offshoring on those who lose their jobs and the existing U.K. work forces that have to deal with dissatisfied customers."

Andy McCue of Silicon.com reported from London.


See also:  Security, Privacy
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Identity and data theft is a global concern and countires should make stringent laws to combat it. Companies should educate their employess on the consequences of such action.

This is however not an exclusive problem to India and the issue should not be turned into a xenophobic attack on a country. This incident happened in 2005 and the concerned persons were arrested. I believe what was shown on TV was the documentary of 2005. The same year almost the same month there was a huge ID Theft by US bank employees..link below. So things have to be put into perspective and it has to handled as an international effort rather than portraying a specific country or its people as a theft zone

(web link)
Posted by Sean chong on Saturday, October 07 2006 12:01 AM

steps should be taken to ensure security on the user/client's data to ensure confidentity
Posted by anonymous on Thursday, October 12 2006 02:28 PM

the case is of 2005 which was shown in a TV show in a documentray recently .the case is very sensitive both indian Govt and indian companies dealing with outsourcing should take some serious steps to prevent these kind of situations happening in near future steps like recruting graduate proffessional people in the industry and srutinizing the employees infomation before exposing him to serious bussiness
Posted by T.srinivas Rao on Friday, October 20 2006 06:01 AM

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