Banks fail to hold off threat

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Lieberman was observing Yom Kippur and could not be reached Wednesday. The FBI and Justice Department declined to comment on the origin of the attacks.

Two bankers, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said their banks were also on the alert for cyber thieves who might use the attacks as a diversion.

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In a Sept. 17 bulletin, the FBI had warned of “a new trend in which cyber criminal actors are using spam and phishing emails … to compromise financial institution networks and obtain employee login information.”

The bulletin said hackers have used denial-of-service attacks as distractions at times when they have logged in to bank systems using credentials of bank executives and then have transferred funds. This happened mainly at small banks and credit unions, but also some big ones, the bulletin said.

Electronic banking is an important new frontier for banks, which say it saves them on transaction costs while making it easy for customers to run their financial lives. So disruptions like these this week can deliver a huge negative jolt.

Dani Walter, 21, a media student at Oregon State University, said she was unable to access U.S. Bank via the Internet from about 8 a.m. until noon Wednesday.

Walter said her money was untouched, but she remained worried about how future attacks could hurt the financial system.

“I was surprised that (so) many banks are that vulnerable to it,” she said. “Honestly, if they can do that, it does make me worry that they could compromise accounts too.”

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