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Marriott Says Hackers Stole More Than 5 Million Passport Numbers (cnet.com)

Marriott has downsized its original estimate on a major data breach, but the number of people affected is still historic. The hotel group announced Friday that it now believes hackers accessed the records of up to 383 million guests, following an investigation it conducted with a forensics and analytics team. In November, it had reported an estimate of as many as 500 million guests. From a report: Even at that lower figure, the Marriott incident remains one of the largest personal data breaches in history, more than double that of Equifax, which exposed the personal data of 147.7 million American. Data breaches have become a common issue for massive companies that collect and store information on millions of people. In 2018, tech giants like Facebook and Reddit have fallen victim to data breaches. Hackers look for poor protection that they can bypass to steal valuable details like Social Security numbers, birth dates, email addresses and credit card numbers.

2 of 71 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Sue them senseless by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 3, Informative

    just WHY does a hotel need to know your PASSPORT number?

    that boggles the mind.

    yesterday, I was talking to an indian friend and we were talking about privacy and how much info you are willing to give out. I give out NOTHING unless its really needed; he gives anything you ask. he didn't even understand why it would be a problem to not give out info. I think in india, they are so programmed into following the rules and not challenging authority. when they come here, they continue doing the same and the companies that invade your privacy probably LOVE this.

    as an american, born and raised here, I continue to explain WHY you want to say no to almost all info request and to limit who gets what, but its an uphill battle. the 'Ive done nothing wrong...' argument is still strong with many kinds of people and we need to change this FAST or we'll continue to supply data to bad guys, who will wield it over us. (btw, the bad guys include local governments; they also can't be trusted with all the info we give them).

    many foreigners don't understand even even born/raised americans are still not getting it. we need to change this but I'm not sure how we can teach people responsible 'info mgmt' behavior. with one breach after another, even that is not enough to show people that they need to say no to data from corps.

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    "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
  2. Re:Marriott tried to block cell communications rig by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 3, Informative

    Marriot also owns Doubletree -- recently a Black man was ejected from a Doubletree in Portland for not interrupting a phone call with his family to "prove" that he was a guest there. Never mind that he showed his room key to the hotel's rent-a-cop, apparently that wasn't enough.