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Crooks Can Make You Pay For Their @Starbucks With Simple Screengrab

Researchers have discovered a security flaw in the new Starbucks Rewards Card iPhone app that could let someone else rack up a bunch of free coffees on your dime. All someone has to do is take a picture of your barcode and then they can use it to buy all the delicious black swill they want, draining your account to the last drop.

"If companies accept the representation of the card without verifying the device through some of the other contactless, RFID or other proximity methods," Kelley Langford, vice president of sales and marketing at System Innovators, told Mobile Commerce Daily, "then they are naive and will be victimized."

The hack depends on someone getting access to your phone, so just don't let it out of your sight and you'll probably be fine. You can also make sure to password-protect your iPhone and/or use the password protection feature on the Starbucks app. Unless of course someone hides a camera in the Starbucks near the point of purchase and uses it to capture customers' barcodes...

starbucksapp.jpgIn fact, I can picture the story now.... "Russian Gangs use spycams to harvest Starbucks barcodes, resell on the black (coffee) market....a full starbucks card goes for $1, they're sold in bulk over secret online IRC chatrooms...Savvy criminals know to only slowly drain the accounts, buying a macchiato here, a rice krispie treat there...Lisa Tampanelli first began to suspect that she was a victim of Starbucks card theft after she checked her statement and saw charges for items she would never buy..."Chocolate frappacino blasts? Black and white cookies? I'm a strict no-drip cafe au lait girl."

We've reached out to Starbucks for comment.

Starbucks to Offer Beer and Wine

Starbucks patrons could soon be riding an entirely new kind of buzz.  
starbucks

In an effort to attract more evening customers--reportedly, Starbucks gets 70% of its business before 2 p.m.--the coffee franchise is looking to offer regional beers and wines.

A location in Seattle is the first to offer alcohol in its newly revamped store. Kris Engskov, a region vice president for Starbucks, said, "What we've done is we've tried to create a variety of options that you might find in more of a restaurant at night."

If the Seattle location does well, it likely will only be a matter of time before other locations start offering beer and wine, as well as a wider variety of food. And don't worry about feeling out of place in a traditional Starbucks with a glass of cabernet in your hand--the stores are reportedly being remodeled for a decidedly un-Starbucks look.

So could there be any new-Starbucks drawbacks (or drawbucks, as NewsFeed likes to think of them)?  Definitely. It's largely thanks to Starbucks that paying $5 for a cup of coffee became normal--who knows what could happen to the cost of a pint. (via USA Today)

Starbucks Stores in New York Now Accepting Mobile Payments

I'm a big fan of mobile payments and Starbucks!  So when the two come together it gets my attention.  I've had the Starbucks Mobile Payment App on my iPhone for six months, hoping to find a store where I can use it, to no avail.  Mobile payments make perfect sense.  I rarely carry cash when traveling because of the risk.  I always have my iPhone and would be perfectly comfortable paying with it.

So go Starbucks!  I am pulling for your success with this venture.  I'll be in NYC next week and will be ready with my iPhone!
Mashable Jennifer Van Grove
Starbucks has seen sufficient success with its Starbucks Card Mobile payment pilot program in select San Francisco, Seattle and Target stores that its ready to extend the program to nearly 300 company-operated stores in New York City and Long Island.

Starbucks Card Mobile for iPhone and BlackBerry lets users pay for their coffee by holding up the 2-D barcode on their smartphone to the scanner at the counter. The application allows customers to manage and reload their Starbucks Cards as well.

Customers have responded positively to the mobile payment option, Starbucks reports.

“We’re seeing more and more customers using their smartphones as their mobile wallets,” says Brady Brewer, vice president Starbucks Card and Loyalty. “We’ve heard from our customers on My Starbucks Idea that they want a faster, more convenient way to pay.”

Read the full article here