Business Week has an excellent article about a major hack or I should say major crime.
” Most gamblers were still asleep, and the gondoliers had yet to pole their way down the ersatz canal in front of the Venetian casino on the Las Vegas Strip. But early on the chilly morning of Feb. 10, just above the casino floor, the offices of the world’s largest gaming company were gripped by chaos. Computers were flatlining, e-mail was down, most phones didn’t work, and several of the technology systems that help run the $14 billion operation had sputtered to a halt.”
” Computer engineers at Las Vegas Sands Corp. raced to figure out what was happening. Within an hour, they had a diagnosis: Sands was under a withering cyber attack. PCs and servers were shutting down in a cascading IT catastrophe, with many of their hard drives wiped clean. The company’s technical staff had never seen anything like it.”
” In an effort to save as many machines as they could, IT staffers scrambled across the casino floors of Sands’ Vegas properties—the Venetian and its sister hotel, the Palazzo—ripping network cords out of every functioning computer they could find, including PCs used by pit bosses to track gamblers and kiosks where slots players cash in their tickets.”
If you thought Sony was the first major hack, it most certainly isn’t. The story of this casino hack is documented in great detail by Businessweek and is well worth a read. Begs the question are we safe to be connected?
I blame Microsoft and other large IT companies. They just don’t build-in protection from attack. I have a three Windows 8.1 machines in the house and I cannot believe the number of security updates I get, how can Windows after all this time still need 150mb of updates every few weeks?
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