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FSFE supporters affected: Payment provider Nexi cancelled us

fsfe.org

109 points by rasjani 10 days ago · 31 comments

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sam_lowry_ 10 days ago

Reminds me of the famous "Our security auditor is an idiot. How do I give him the information he wants? [1]

[1] https://serverfault.com/questions/293217/our-security-audito...

  • zvqcMMV6Zcr 10 days ago

    That is crazier than any old dailywtf stories, and that site felt like everyone tried to one-up each other.

  • rcxdude 10 days ago

    Is there some part of PCI auditing requirements that is getting misinterpreted by some auditors to demand this? Though in my experience with standards like this what auditors want to see and what the standards say often have only loose overlap anyhow.

    • SpicyLemonZest 10 days ago

      It's pretty counterintuitive from an auditing perspective. If the PCI standards require server racks to be painted red, it's entirely normal for an auditor to ask to see them, and very suspicious for you to say that they're in an encrypted box where nobody can check if they're red or not. I don't mean to excuse it, but I can understand how the error happens.

      • rcxdude 10 days ago

        This is true. Maybe it's someone seeing a requirement like "all passwords must conform to these rules" and deciding that it means they need to check them directly, instead of looking at the systems that enforce that constraint.

  • samus 10 days ago

    Right until the end I thought the guy was doing a social engineering penetration test, checking whether he could brow beat the server admins into bending over backwards to reveal this information.

Freak_NL 10 days ago

The FSFE justly drew the line at providing private information of supporters. How many other customers of Nexi simply handed over such data 'because audit'?

  • rasjaniOP 10 days ago

    So this was not only about FSFE and payments for them but a general audit of their (Nexi's) customers ?

    • rcxdude 10 days ago

      It seems unlikely that the FSFE is the first customer they have asked for this information.

    • altairprime 10 days ago

      Nexi’s mid-2025 statement notes that they’re finalizing imposition of a ‘one process, all subsidiaries’ auditing costs reduction program across all of their subsidiary banks. The FSFE was likely being (incorrectly) audited under business-provides-services rules imposed by the parent megacorp, rather than as whatever human-led interpretation the bank had used formally, or as whatever charities or PACs are called in the EU. Ironically, had they switched exclusively to freedom-restricted passkeys, they could have structured their credentials store to divulge no private information and no usable credentials while formally complying with the bank’s efforts to find cause to fire them as a customer. But I think the bank would still have just found another way to fire them regardless.

    • andrewflnr 10 days ago

      Yeah, using the word "cancelled" that way in the title is... hyperbolic, even if it is technically true that the contract was cancelled.

    • TavsiE9s 10 days ago

      That’s how I read the linked post as well, yes.

  • zettabomb 9 days ago

    It's not even just private information, because in any properly configured system it is explicitly unknowable information.

eequah9L 10 days ago

> Over the past few months, our former payment provider Nexi S.p.A. (“Nexi”) requested access to private data, which we understood to be specifically the usernames and passwords of our supporters.

I must be missing something, but why is there an expectation that clear text passwords would even be known?

  • rcxdude 10 days ago

    Probably because most people haven't internalized how password hashing works.

samsk 10 days ago

We work with MLS provider(s) that requires us to keep plaintext password for our users and provide it on request in case of `breach in the security of MLS Listing Information or a violation of MLS Rules`.

The user is accessing only copy of their data in _our_ systems, the user has no contact with MLS itself directly or indirectly.

rswail 10 days ago

Sounds like someone is being "overenthusiastic" about interpreting the KYC/ALM regulations.

Combined with the FSFE not being your "usual" charitable or business organization so setting off auditor red flags and perhaps raising the risk profile of Nexi as a payment processor.

butokai 10 days ago

As an Italian living in another EU country, I always thought that the amount of (broken) bureaucracy of Italy was not particularly worse. However this story comes after a couple more I heard this week, in a line of absurd practice possibly due to absurd regulations.

ahofmann 7 days ago

Just a follow up: I wrote nexi germany via some contact form, that I will avoid using their services because of that story. They called me back and told me, that they asked the fsfe for a test account only. They also made an internal investigation, if someone asked for passwords of real accounts, which is a clear no-go for them.

janpio 10 days ago

So what did Nexi really want, and how did it get mangled so badly that it came out as "specifically the usernames and passwords of our supporters"?

  • rcxdude 10 days ago

    It's entirely possible that is actually what they wanted (at least what the people in the company they were talking to wanted). I suspect that "we understood to mean" is language carefully designed to avoid a lawsuit.

littlecranky67 10 days ago

Everytime people say bitcoin has no use case, I'd like to point them to cases like this.

grigio 10 days ago

Maybe now more F/OSS supporters will understand the need of Bitcoin/Monero

  • g947o 10 days ago

    You could put it this way, but to me the bigger question is why would a payment processor have such ridiculous requests? That probably should be examined first.

  • jasonvorhe 10 days ago

    Not unless they start questioning the Club of Rome induced climate scam.

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