There's the slightly good news,Peter North Jenna Jameson - Priceless (1995) and then there's the really bad news.
International hotel chain Marriott International, Inc. announced Jan. 4 that the massive hack of its Starwood customer database first reported in Nov. was both simultaneously less troublesome and a whole lot worse than initially thought.
Let's get that bad news out of the way first: It turns out that over five million customers' passport numbers were stolen by what is believed to have been hackers working for the Chinese government, and that data was unencrypted.
SEE ALSO: Marriott data breach affected 500 million customers over four yearsAs for the sort of good news: According to an update published to the company's website, the total number of guests affected by the hack is likely not the 500 million first feared. It's still a lot, though.
"The company has concluded with a fair degree of certainty that information for fewer than 383 million unique guests was involved," reads the update, "although the company is not able to quantify that lower number because of the nature of the data in the database."
Got that? So instead of 500 million people, only up to 383 million Marriott guests (but maybe less) need to worry that unknown hackers have access to their personal data. But, as mentioned above, the update also notes that some of the stolen information was unencrypted — meaning that whoever took it should have no trouble accessing it.
And the unencrypted data in question just so happens to be passport numbers.
"Marriott now believes that approximately 5.25 million unencrypted passport numbers were included in the information accessed by an unauthorized third party," the update explains. "The information accessed also includes approximately 20.3 million encrypted passport numbers."
The company says it has "no evidence" that hackers got the "encryption key needed to decrypt the encrypted passport numbers." So, assuming you trust Marriott's statement, that's good at least.
As the New York Timesnotes, that hackers got so many unencrypted passport numbers is particularly worrying. Notably, in the hands of a foreign intelligence service, the numbers would allow said agency to track people as they move around the globe. In addition, in the form of a hotel chain's database, it might allow for conclusions to be drawn regarding who guests travel and work with. This could cause problems for government employees or contractors.
But don't stress too hard about this, as Marriott is here to assure you that the barn door has finally been closed on its Starwood reservation database effective 2018. Too bad it couldn't have managed that feat five years ago.
Topics Cybersecurity
Girl's NSFW birthday cake goes viral for very obvious reasonsHTC's standalone Vive headset could save VR from AR's assaultJames Cameron is making a 'Titanic' documentary to find out where he went wrongThis startup wants to help you claim every last dollar of financial aidDisney is using facial recognition to predict how you'll react to moviesEuron Greyjoy is 'Game of Thrones' Season 7's wild cardKanye's sneakers appear in the most unexpected place: 'Splatoon 2'iPhone keep connecting to spotty public WiApple is no longer selling the iPod nano and iPod shuffle'Game of Thrones' board game already funded over 200% on KickstarterGuest photobombs bride and groom for a wedding day memory they can't unseeGiant Antarctic iceberg sheds pieces as new cracks form on ice shelfGuest photobombs bride and groom for a wedding day memory they can't unsee'TGIF' is coming to Hulu to satisfy all your '90s cravingsIs 'Game of Thrones gearing up for a War of the Mad Queens?People aren't taking Coke Zero's demise very well'Wonder Woman' sequel release dateHTC's standalone Vive headset could save VR from AR's assaultKanye's sneakers appear in the most unexpected place: 'Splatoon 2'Why Trump's tweets banning trans people from the military are his most destructive yet Culture Is a Wonderful Fiction: Guy Davenport’s Journals Holiday Travel Aesop and The Paris Review: A Partnership Extended Sharia Law Goes to the Movies The Crystal Cities and Floating Continents of Paul Scheerbart Trying to Find a Good Synonym for “Said”? Stop. Use “Said.” Being the Last Man on Earth Seeing the Sixties and Seventies Through 2001 and Alien The Song Stuck in My Head: “Skylark” Yeats’s “Second Coming”—Our Most Thoroughly Pillaged Poem Kay Nielsen’s Stunning Illustrations for “East of the Sun...” What Really Goes on at COP21? A Day Notes on the Demise of Travel Guidebooks The Art of Losing: Rowan Ricardo Phillips on the NY Knicks That Time When Harry Truman Got a Menorah The Inscrutable Madame Roland’s Remarkable Prison Memoir Frank Lloyd Wright Designed a Gas Station—It’s Still There Edgar Allan Poe’s Only Best The Sour Shopkeeper No Known Remedy: My Problem with Flies
2.9663s , 10134.6015625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Peter North Jenna Jameson - Priceless (1995)】,Fresh Information Network