Boston Herald

Stolen hotel data opens doors for crime

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NEW YORK — The data stolen from the Marriott hotel empire in a massive breach is so rich and specific it could be used for espionage, identity theft, reputation­al attacks and even home burglaries, security experts say. Hackers stole data on as many as 500 million guests of former Starwood chain properties over four years including credit card and passport numbers, birthdates, phone numbers and hotel arrival and departure dates. It is one of the biggest data breaches on record. By comparison, last year’s Equifax hack affected more than 145 million people. A Target breach in 2013 affected more than 41 million payment card accounts and exposed contact informatio­n for more than 60 million customers. But the target here — hotels where high-stakes business deals, romantic trysts and espionage are daily currency — makes the data gathered especially sensitive. The affected reservatio­n system could be extremely enticing to nation-state spies interested in the travels of military and senior government officials, said Jesse Varsalone, a University of Maryland cybersecur­ity expert. “There are just so many things you can extrapolat­e from people staying at hotels,” he said. And because the data included reservatio­ns for future stays, along with home addresses, burglars could learn when someone wouldn’t be home, said Scott Grissom of Legal-Shield, a provider of legal services. The affected hotel brands were operated by Starwood before it was acquired by Marriott in 2016. They include W Hotels, St. Regis, Sheraton, Westin, Element, Aloft, The Luxury Collection, Le Méridien and Four Points. Starwood-branded timeshare properties were also affected. None of the Marriott-branded chains were threatened. Marriott said it did not yet know how many credit card numbers might have been stolen. A spokeswoma­n said Saturday that it was not yet able to respond to questions such as whether the intrusion and data theft was committed by a single or multiple groups. Cybersecur­ity expert Andrei Barysevich of Recorded Future said Saturday he believed the breach was financiall­y motivated. A cybercrime gang expert in credit card theft such as the eastern European group known as Fin7 could be a suspect, he said, noting that a dark web credit card vendor recently announced that 2.6 million cards stolen from an unnamed hotel chain would soon be available to the online criminal underworld. “We will have to wait until an official forensic report, although, Marriott may never share their findings openly,” he said.

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