Lucian Constantin
CSO Senior Writer

Identity thieves obtain 100,000 electronic filing PINs from IRS system

news
Feb 10, 20162 mins

The automated attack using previously stolen personal data attempted to obtain E-file PINS for over 460,000 people

The Internal Revenue Service was the target of an attack that used stolen social security numbers and other taxpayer data to obtain PINs that can be used to file tax returns electronically.

The attack occurred in January and targeted an IRS Web application that taxpayers use to obtain their so-called Electronic Filing (E-file) PINs. The app requires taxpayer information such as name, Social Security number, date of birth and full address.

Attackers attempted to obtain E-file PINs corresponding to 464,000 unique SSNs using an automated bot, and did so successfully for 101,000 SSNs before the IRS blocked it.

The personal taxpayer data used during the attack was not obtained from the IRS, but was stolen elsewhere, the agency said in a statement. The IRS is notifying affected taxpayers via mail and will monitor their accounts to protect them from tax-related identity theft.

While the IRS said that externally acquired taxpayer data was used, the agency did suffer a security breach last year that allowed attackers to gain information such as Social Security information, date of birth and street address for over 300,000 taxpayers.

That attack involved the IRS’ “Get Transcript” application and in that case too, the agency said that attackers were able to pass the app’s verification steps using information acquired from an external source.

In recent years there have been many data breaches that gave hackers access to personal information, including SSNs. Last year alone, health insurers Anthem, Premera, CareFirst and Excellus announced large data breaches that affected tens of millions of Americans. Another breach at the U.S. Office of Personnel Management exposed personal information on 21.5 million current and former U.S. government employees.

Given the sheer amount of personal data that’s now in the hands of cyber criminals, it’s likely that some of them will try to monetize it and one possible method is by filing fraudulent tax returns.

Lucian Constantin

Lucian Constantin writes about information security, privacy, and data protection for CSO. Before joining CSO in 2019, Lucian was a freelance writer for VICE Motherboard, Security Boulevard, Forbes, and The New Stack. Earlier in his career, he was an information security correspondent for the IDG News Service and Information security news editor for Softpedia.

Before he became a journalist, Lucian worked as a system and network administrator. He enjoys attending security conferences and delving into interesting research papers. He lives and works in Romania.

You can reach him at lucian_constantin@foundryco.com or @lconstantin on X. For encrypted email, his PGP key's fingerprint is: 7A66 4901 5CDA 844E 8C6D 04D5 2BB4 6332 FC52 6D42

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