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When Pralid wants more . . .
Indian call centre 'fraud' probe
Cash machine Information passed on could have been used to clone credit cards Police are investigating reports that an Indian call centre worker sold the bank account details of 1,000 UK customers to an undercover reporter. The Sun claims one of its journalists bought the personal details from an IT worker in Delhi for £4.25 each. They included account holders' secret passwords, addresses, phone numbers and passport details, it reports. City of London Police has begun an investigation after being handed a dossier by the newspaper. While the allegations made in the dossier are very serious, City of London Police would like to remind people that incidents of this kind are still relatively rare City of London Police The centre worker reportedly told the Sun he could sell up to 200,000 account details each month. Details handed to the reporter had been examined by a security expert who had indicated they were genuine, the paper said. The information passed on could have been used to raid the accounts of victims or to clone credit cards. 'Reflect on decision' More than one bank is thought to be involved in the fraud. A police spokeswoman said officers were not yet aware of "the breadth of what we are going to be investigating". "While the allegations made in the dossier are very serious, City of London Police would like to remind people that incidents of this kind are still relatively rare," she said. The Amicus union said it had warned of the "data protection implications" of offshoring financial services. "Companies that have offshore jobs need to reflect on their decision and the assumption that cost savings benefiting them and their shareholders outweigh consumer confidentiality and confidence," senior finance officer Dave Fleming said. |
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