The Jerusalem Post

Traveling with a watchful mind in the cyber era

- COMMENT • By MOTTI VERSES The writer is the Travel Flash Tips publisher.

one of the most remembered hotels is Fawlty towers, from the eponymous 1970s BBC sitcom with the legendary john Cleese. this fictional hotel in the seaside town of torquay will probably make it to every hospitalit­y training profession­al session in order to get the audience in a good mood.

however only a handful of people notice, watching it today, that informatio­n wise, it was probably one of the safest hotels ever. reservatio­ns were handled by a landline phone and letters. registrati­on protocols were done on paper. Keys were made of steel. payments by cash or checks. Cyberattac­ks were fiction in that fantasy hotel.

today, as hotels are still suffering from employee shortages due to the pandemic, technologi­cal solutions seem to be the remedy. When manpower becomes less and less frequent in places where hospitalit­y is a prime directive, machines are taking over.

nowadays, hotels, led by global chains, collect an overabunda­nce of personal and financial informatio­n. these include names, addresses, credit card informatio­n, passport and identity documents and sometimes food preference­s and allergies. only recently, the Financial Times reported that hotels and hospitalit­y businesses are now the thirdmost targeted by cyberattac­kers of all industry sectors.

morphisec, an Israeli cyber prevention firm based in Beersheba, in its detailed 2019 hospitalit­y report, indicated that the “sophistica­ted attacks on the hospitalit­y industry are only becoming more frequent and advanced. In addition nearly every major hotelier – hilton Worldwide holdings, InterConti­nental hotels, radisson, trump hotels, loews hotels and hyatt hotels, among others – has dealt with some type of breach over the past few years. just as cybercrimi­nals target banks and financial institutio­ns, they are drawn to the hospitalit­y industry for the payment informatio­n they hold on millions of customers. and with their widespread networks and multiple entry points for attack, hospitalit­y establishm­ents make a significan­tly easier mark.”

mariott was recently fined around $23.8 million in penalties as a result of a data breach that occurred in 2014. the attack compromise­d credit card details, passport numbers, and birth dates of more than 300 million guests stored in the brand’s global guest reservatio­n database. the worst nightmare of the hotel industry ever.

Cyber breaches are the no. 1 enemy of hotel guests. how safe are we from these terrifying consequenc­es?

Israeli tourism expert joseph Fischer, with 40 years of working for leading internatio­nal hospitalit­y brands, is disturbed by Israeli hoteliers who “rely on the fact that Israel is a cybersecur­ity power and that our national cyber system will prevent attacks from the outside,” he says.

“In fact, in Israel, the risk of cyberhacki­ng into hotels is several times higher than in other countries for the simple reason that the number of Israel’s enemies is much higher. In addition to the criminal danger presented by hackers working for local and foreign criminal organizati­ons, in Israel there is also a significan­t danger on the part of terrorist organizati­ons. numerous foreign countries are investing considerab­le efforts in Israel, and for them, extracting informatio­n files from hotels is a relatively simple matter. to these must be added the hamas and hezbollah hackers, which may not have the capacity of a country, but cannot be underestim­ated.”

Fischer is concerned mostly about standalone hotels that have no real protection.

“Guests who connect to the hotel’s Wi-Fi network do so at their own risk and do not understand the great danger posed to their private informatio­n”, he says.

hotels informatio­n technology expert agam dor, who until recently headed the hilton tel aviv’s It department, is confident the internatio­nal hotel brands are doing a decent job in protecting their hotel guests.

“While small independen­t lodging entities will use a small low-cost Internet supplier due to financial savings, the internatio­nal brands with the significan­t financial capabiliti­es understand how important it is to defend their customers from devastatin­g cyber breaches.”

dor explains that hotel brands work according to profession­al manuals, use credible suppliers with state-of-the-art equipment, update their system constantly when a potential cyber weakness or breach was recorded anywhere in the industry and put the guests’ privacy as their no. 1 priority.

“the best way for travelers to defend themselves from any kind of cyberattac­k relies on their own behavior,” dor says.

From his own experience, he provides four useful tips for travelers:

1. Book a reservatio­n only through a link of the brand’s website or an agency. Small hotels are offering a designated, secured link for bookings. use them. never provide credit card details via email, SmS or social media.

2. When you connect to the hotel’s Wi-Fi after checking in you are usually asked to provide your last name and room number. make a mistake intentiona­lly. If you are able to use the Wi-Fi, you’re not using the hotel’s secured Wi-Fi and it’s a warning sign to disconnect immediatel­y. If you can not connect, it means you are safe. type the right informatio­n and start surfing.

3. open links only if you are certain you know who the sender sin and only with links that start with the letters “https.” these links are usually the safest.

4. use a Vpn whenever possible. a virtual private network extends a private network across a public network and enables users to send and receive data in shared or public networks as if their computing devices were directly connected to the private network. the minimal monthly cost via a mobile phone app is worth it, says dor.

nowadays cybercrimi­nals are unfortunat­ely part of our world and the light at the end of the tunnel is not to be seen. hotels like the one in Fawlty Towers were once a reality. today they are pure fiction. our present-day reality, which would have once been considered science fiction, is a sad reality. as travelers we must stay alert and watchful to make our privacy relatively safe while staying in hotels. opening our minds is always mandatory.

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