Tag Archive for: KIRO

Omni Hotels confirms customers’ personal data stolen in ransomware attack – KIRO 7 News Seattle


DALLAS — Officials with Omni Hotels & Resorts confirmed that cybercriminals stole the personal information of its customers during what appeared to be a ransomware attack last month.

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According to a post on its website on Sunday, the hotel giant said that “limited information pertaining to a subset of our customers may have been impacted.”

Omni said the stolen data includes customer names, email addresses, postal addresses and guest loyalty program information. The breach does not include information pertaining to financial information or Social Security numbers.

Omni said it shut down its systems on March 29 after discovering intruders in its systems, TechCrunch reported. Guests reported outages across Omni’s properties, with some customers experiencing issues with telephone and wi-fi issues, according to the technology news website.

Some customers said their room keys stopped working.

Omni officials said the chain’s systems were restored by April 8, TechCrunch reported.

“Omni Hotels & Resorts continues to investigate a recent cyberattack on its systems with the assistance of a leading cybersecurity response group,” the company wrote in an update on its website.

The FBI reported that more than 2,825 ransomware complaints were reported during 2023, an increase of 18% over 2022. Losses reported rose by 74%, from $34.3 million to $59.6 million, according to the agency.

Omni Hotels & Resorts is based in Dallas, and the chain operates 50 hotels and resorts in the United States and Canada, according to The Dallas Morning News.

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Former Amazon employee convicted of stealing data from more than 100M people – KIRO 7 News Seattle


SEATTLE — A former Amazon Web Services engineer was found guilty Friday of stealing data from more than 100 million people when she hacked Capital One three years ago.

Paige Thompson, who worked for the software giant until 2016, was convicted Friday of seven federal crimes, including wire fraud, illegally accessing a protected computer and damaging a protected computer, CNBC reported.

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While the wire fraud conviction carries up to 20 years in prison, the two lessor charges are each punishable by as many as five years in prison.

According to a news release issued by the U.S. Attorney’s Office’s western district of Washington, the jury found Thompson not guilty of aggravated identity theft and access device fraud. The panel deliberated for 10 hours.

Prosecutors argued at trial that Thompson created a tool to search for misconfigured AWS accounts, allowing her to hack into accounts from more than 30 Amazon clients, including Capital One. In addition to mining the data she found in the compromised accounts, Thompson was also accused of using her access to some of the retail behemoth’s servers to mine cryptocurrency for her personal benefit, CNBC reported.

“She wanted data, she wanted money, and she wanted to brag,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Andrew Friedman said of Thompson during his closing arguments, the network reported.

According to The Verge, Thompson’s breach, one of the largest on record, exposed the names, birth dates, social security numbers, email addresses and phone numbers of more than 100 million U.S. and Canadian residents.

Capital One has since been fined $80 million in regulatory fines for allegedly failing to secure users’ data and settled with affected customers for $190 million, the technology news outlet reported.

“Far from being an ethical hacker trying to help companies with their computer security, (Thompson) exploited mistakes to steal valuable data and sought to enrich herself,” U.S. Attorney Nick Brown stated in the news release confirming her conviction.

Thompson is slated to be sentenced Sept. 15.

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Home Depot data leak compromises customers’ private info again – KIRO Seattle


KIRO Seattle

Home Depot data leak compromises customers' private info again
KIRO Seattle
“This recent cache of customer data that was exposed on HomeDepot.com is of a different type and scale than what was harvested during Home Depot's breach of 2014,” wrote the Comsumerist, a part of the Consumer Reports organization. “While the …

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data breach – Google News

Android security flaw leaves Gmail vulnerable to hackers – KIRO Seattle


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Android security flaw leaves Gmail vulnerable to hackers
KIRO Seattle
Security researchers have uncovered a major flaw in mobile operating systems which could give hackers easy access to personal information. Here's the scary bit: The exploit can hack into your Gmail account with a 92 percent success rate. Researchers
How to hack Gmail 92 percent of the timeZDNet
A closer look at the Gmail smartphone app hack and its wider implicationsITProPortal
Researchers find way to hack Gmail with 92 percent success rateCNET

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