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Vegas data breach

Updated my quote page

I have now updated my quote page, added categories and provided linked to external sites where you can find my quotes Vegas data breach The hackers responsible for the attack obtained some personal information belonging to customers who transacted with MGM Resorts before March 2019.
Vegas data breach

Vegas data breach

In its filing with the United States Securities Exchange Commission, the company said that it had also been a victim of a social engineering attack on its IT support vendor.  On the Cutting Edge of the Profession In February, a 30-year-old man shot himself in the left thigh, apparently unintentionally, on the gaming floor of The Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas, according to an arrest report. And in January, a 40-year-old man died by suicide after shooting himself with an AR-15 in a public restroom on the casino floor of the Rio.

Scattered Spider considered a 'serious threat'

Both the MGM Internal Resort and Caesars Entertainment face up to 9 federal lawsuits over the cyber-attacks. However, there are some lessons that you can glean from these major cybersecurity incidents for the sake of your own business before it’s too late. Surging AI business means datacentres could switch on “no vacancy” signs Both breaches appear to be the handiwork of a hacker gang known as Scattered Spider, according to a Bloomberg News report citing four people familiar with the matter.

Vegas data breach

'Virtually all of the Company's guest-facing systems have been restored,' it said, adding that it expects no impact on its full-year results from the breach. Strictly necessary data collection Yes, MGM has been hacked before. In 2019, MGM Resorts suffered a data breach that exposed personal information on as many as 10.6 million customers, including celebrities, journalists and government officials. The stolen data included names, phone numbers, email addresses and dates of birth. The hackers later posted the data online for anyone to download.