Lax internet security has resulted in a virtual boycott of Vietnam by online
retailers, local press reports claim.
Security is so poor that malicious hackers have easy access to private
information on state websites, a minister told reporters from the
government-sponsored
Vietnam
Investment Review last week.
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"Vietnam has been under an invisible 'soft' global embargo for online
payments due to poor security," said Vu Duc Dam, deputy minister at the Ministry
of Information and Communications.
Online payment gateways typically assume that blocks of internet address are
less trustworthy if they have been the source of large numbers of fraudulent
credit card transactions, or attempted transactions, in the past.
Payments from these untrusted addresses may require more thorough
verification of identity, or may be blocked entirely.
Poor internet security increases the risk of being blocked in this manner, as
malicious hackers sometimes take advantage of security vulnerabilities to hijack
PCs in other nations through which to route fraudulent activity.
Nguyen Tan Dung, Vietnam's prime minister, is backing moves to establish a
national department in charge of information security. The new department will
have the twin goals of protecting government data and helping keep online
payments secure.
Officials also warned that Vietnamese surfers are at risk of having their
international emails blocked.
The country's sole commercial ISP, government-controlled Vietnam Data
Communications Company, is now receiving 2,000 emails a day complaining about
spam sent by its users or relayed through their computers, according to its
director, La The Hung.
"The emails from international anti-spam organisations are the first warnings
about emails from Vietnam," said Hung.
"They may put ISP servers on a blacklist and block email from Vietnam to the
world if ISPs do not handle spam."
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