Super Casino Security Breach
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US – Security breach at Minnesota casino By Lewis - 12 November 2014 Over 1,600 transactions on payment cards used at Grand Casino Mille Lacs, a casino in the US over a five month period – April 24 and Oct. 9 – were accessed by an unauthorised person using malware, the casino announced yesterday. SuperCasino’s upfront response to its data breach stands in sharp contrast to the recent reaction of Nigerian sports betting operator SureBet247, which categorically dismissed reports of its. Las Vegas-based casino operator Affinity Gaming has accused Chicago-based IT security firm Trustwave of failing to properly investigate and contain a payment card breach suffered by the company in 2013.
Super Casino Security Breach Update
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For the second time in about a year, the Hard Rock hotel-casino's card payment system has been breached.
The casino says customers' names, card numbers and verification codes were exposed.
The breach affects cards used at the hotel between last October and this March.
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Hard Rock released a statement on the breach:
'Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Las Vegas values the relationship we have with our customers, which is why we are notifying you of an incident that may involve your payment card.
'After receiving reports of fraudulent activity associated with payment cards used at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Las Vegas, the resort began an investigation of its payment card network and engaged a leading cyber-security firm to assist. On May 13, 2016, the investigation identified signs of unauthorized access to the resort’s payment card environment. Further investigation revealed the presence of card scraping malware that was designed to target payment card data as the data was routed through the resort’s payment card system. In some instances the program identified payment card data that included cardholder name, card number, expiration date, and internal verification code. In other instances the program only found payment card data that did not include cardholder name. No other customer information was involved. It is possible that cards used at certain restaurant and retail outlets at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Las Vegas between October 27, 2015 and March 21, 2016, could have been affected.
'It is always advisable to remain vigilant to the possibility of fraud by reviewing your payment card statements for any unauthorized activity. You should immediately report any unauthorized charges to your card issuer because payment card rules generally provide that cardholders are not responsible for unauthorized charges reported in a timely manner. The phone number to call is usually on the back of your payment card. Please see the section that follows this notice for additional steps you may take to protect your information.