Marriott Hotels Fined £18.4m For Data Breach That Hit Millions

The UK’s data privacy watchdog has fined the Marriott Hotels chain £18.4m for a major data breach that may have affected up to 339 million guests.

The Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) said names, contact information, and passport details may all have been compromised in a cyber-attack.

The Breach

The breach included seven million guest records for people in the UK.

The ICO said the company failed to put appropriate safeguards in place but acknowledged it had improved.

The first part of the cyber-attack happened in 2014, affecting the Starwood Hotels group, which was acquired by Marriott two years later.

But until 2018, when the problem was first noticed, the attacker continued to have access to all affected systems, including:

names

email addresses

phone numbers

passport numbers

arrival and departure information

VIP status

loyalty programme numbers

On that basis, the ICO said Marriott had failed to protect personal data as required by the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).

In some ways you can feel sorry for Marriott.

Marriott’s Failure

In all the boardroom discussions about the company’s takeover of Starwood, I bet it never realised that a hacker was already lurking inside the valuable databases they were buying.

The cyber-criminals had been in the systems for years, and were effectively thrown into the merger deal without Marriott having a clue.

Herein lies the issue, though – it seems the larger hotel didn’t check what it was buying.

The ICO report makes clear Marriott beefed up the security of Starwood’s IT systems far too late and the hackers had free rein to move around, cherry-picking the data that would sell best on criminal forums.

The fine is nothing like the £99m the ICO planned to issue, but it’s still a massive deterrent for future companies.

It may make executives planning their next big mergers look more carefully and cautiously at the databases they’re about to acquire.

“Millions of people’s data was affected by Marriott’s failure,” commissioner Elizabeth Denham said.

“Thousands contacted a helpline and others may have had to take action to protect their personal data because the company they trusted it with had not.”

Different types of data were exposed for different guests, and some of the estimated 339 million may have represented duplicate records for repeat guests, making an exact count impossible.

Despite imposing a fine, the ICO acknowledged that Marriott had acted quickly once it found the flaw, and had improved its systems since.

In a statement, Marriott wrote that it “deeply regrets the incident”.

“Marriott remains committed to the privacy and security of its guests’ information and continues to make significant investments in security measures for its systems.

“The ICO recognises the steps taken by Marriott following discovery of the incident to promptly inform and protect the interests of its guests,” it said.

Clout News

Recent Posts

FaZe Clan Announces 21-Year-Old Twitch streamer Lacy As Newest Member

Lacy is a 21-year-old Twitch streamer who is famous for playing Fortnite and has a…

2 days ago

READ: Tristan Tate Reveals His Earnings from X Ad Revenue Share Program

Let us see how much contribution does X make to Tristan Tate's net worth. You…

2 days ago

Jake Paul Vs Mike Tyson: Fight Date, Time, How to watch, and more

Jake Paul vs Mike Tyson fight is happening on Saturday, July 20, 2024 at the…

2 days ago

Why did Streaming Company Paramount’s CEO Bob Bakish Step Down?

According to various news outlets, this has to do with the upcoming merger deal of…

2 days ago

Morreale Paris Unveils New Fragrance Collection with Mesmerizing Film Campaign “The Party”

In a dazzling display of elegance and youthful exuberance, Morreale Paris has introduced its latest…

2 weeks ago

Jason Jouan’s Phenomenal Journey to Real Estate Success

Jason's journey is like a business adventure. He's not just building properties; he's building a…

4 months ago