Spyware Found on US Hotel Check-in Computers (techcrunch.com) 24
A consumer-grade spyware app has been found running on the check-in systems of at least three Wyndham hotels across the United States, TechCrunch reported Wednesday. From the report: The app, called pcTattletale, stealthily and continually captured screenshots of the hotel booking systems, which contained guest details and customer information. Thanks to a security flaw in the spyware, these screenshots are available to anyone on the internet, not just the spyware's intended users.
This is the most recent example of consumer-grade spyware exposing sensitive information because of a security flaw in the spyware itself. It's also the second known time that pcTattletale has exposed screenshots of the devices that the app is installed on. Several other spyware apps in recent years had security bugs or misconfigurations that exposed the private and personal data of unwitting device owners, in some cases prompting action by government regulators. pcTattletale allows whomever controls it to remotely view the target's Android or Windows device and its data, from anywhere in the world. pcTattletale's website says the app "runs invisibly in the background on their workstations and can not be detected."
This is the most recent example of consumer-grade spyware exposing sensitive information because of a security flaw in the spyware itself. It's also the second known time that pcTattletale has exposed screenshots of the devices that the app is installed on. Several other spyware apps in recent years had security bugs or misconfigurations that exposed the private and personal data of unwitting device owners, in some cases prompting action by government regulators. pcTattletale allows whomever controls it to remotely view the target's Android or Windows device and its data, from anywhere in the world. pcTattletale's website says the app "runs invisibly in the background on their workstations and can not be detected."
The Indisputable Feature. (Score:4, Informative)
When spyware leaks information, it's most definitely a feature.
Calling that shit a "bug" is like making the race car faster and calling it a "mistake".
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The real question is, is this covered by pcTattletale's 60 day money back guarantee? :-P
But of course! Guaranteed to Tattle or Tell, or your money back. Heh, thanks for the laugh.
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The app, called pcTattletale, stealthily and continually captured screenshots of the hotel booking systems, which contained guest details and customer information.
Now there's the mistake, if you do this exact thing but call it "Windows Recall" instead of "pcTattletale" then it's all legit and above board.
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"When spyware leaks information, it's most definitely a feature."
When spyware leaks information to someone who isn't paying, it's a bug.
"making the race car faster and calling it a "mistake"."
Major racing series are heavily involved in limiting the performance of the cars involved. If your racecar goes faster that's called "cheating".
Re: Go back (Score:2)
But then how are they supposed to check their Facebook page???
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Have you been to a hotel front desk? They're already on their phone.
How many managers (Score:2)
remote desktop / remote management tools (Score:2)
remote desktop / remote management tools can view what they are doing as well.
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Windows Recall (Score:5, Insightful)
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This is why Recall has been created, to steal screenshots to train their AI models. As a bonus spyware peddlers won't have to work as much.
Managementware (Score:2)
Is managementware worse than regular spyware?
Why does this matter? (Score:5, Funny)
Isn't Microsoft Window going to start doing this by default?
Windows Recall? (Score:3)
Sounds like Windows Recall, that wants to take snapshots of your desktop every couple seconds, save it to disk and let's you I guess mess with the saved picture. So this just a buggy alpha release of that software, leaking stuff to the Internet.
Have fun with that, you Windows users.
pcTattletale: infection vector (Score:2)
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Oh dear me! (Score:2)
So someone can find out I stayed at that crappy little hotel in Anaheim, entirely too far away from Blizzcon? (And met that pretty Special Ops veteran girl and her two-wheel electric whatever? Sigh ...)
I'm doomed, truly.
Probably more as well... (Score:2)
A coworker was planning a holiday, and they got a phishing email that had the details of their trip - their name and flight. It was an email saying their flight had changed and they needed to confirm the new flight details immediately or they wouldn't be allowed to board.
In other words, it was worded like a typical phishing email, but it had his name and flight details. He checked the link and it was a fake link so he knew it wasn't real.
But that one was scary in that it had the details and no one could fig