The Jerusalem Post

Cybersecur­ity firm ITsMine offers free protection to hotels after data breaches

- • By EYTAN HALON

The Israeli cybersecur­ity company ITsMine announced this week that it will provide its artificial intelligen­ce-based data protection solution free of charge to the hotel industry through the end of 2019.

The decision follows Marriott Internatio­nal hotel group’s announceme­nt that it suffered a major data breach affecting personal details of approximat­ely 500 million guests, the latest in a series of industry data breaches this year.

Marriott admitted Friday there had been unauthoriz­ed access to its Starwood guest reservatio­n database, and did not rule out the possibilit­y that hackers obtained necessary informatio­n to decrypt payment card numbers of some customers.

Seeking to better secure organizati­onal data, ITsMine’s automated Data Loss Prevention system promises reduced deployment time and superior protection while detecting data breaches in real-time and blocking data loss. Installati­on of the system takes only two hours.

“Facing increasing­ly sophistica­ted cybersecur­ity attacks and data breaches, companies must find new and improved ways of storing critical customer data,” said ITsMine cofounder and CEO Kfir Kimhi.

“We hope that by offering our advanced solutions free of charge. We will encourage hotels to take immediate action on protecting the valuable data of their guests.”

Founded in 2017 by Kimhi and a team of IDF technology veterans and experts, ITsMine is a portfolio company of the OurCrowd Labs/02 seed-stage incubator. The company was selected as one of the top 10 most innovative cybersecur­ity startups at September’s Internet Security Conference in China.

The Marriott data breach is the latest in a growing number of sophistica­ted hacking attacks on the hotel industry.

In November, Radisson Hotel Group announced that it had identified a breach targeting its Radisson Rewards database. In August, Chinese state media reported that 500 million pieces of customer informatio­n belonging to Shanghai-based Huazhu Group had been shared online.

On Tuesday, the question-and-answer website Quora said that informatio­n belonging to 100 million users was compromise­d by hackers, gaining access to possible combinatio­n of personal informatio­n, passwords and direct messages.

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