Filed under "shit I can't believe is still happening in 2026 but here we are": 1+ million photo IDs and selfies from a hotel check-in system left publicly exposed online for anyone to find.
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Filed under "shit I can't believe is still happening in 2026 but here we are": 1+ million photo IDs and selfies from a hotel check-in system left publicly exposed online for anyone to find.
This is the latest example of a company leaking government-issued IDs in recent months.
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Filed under "shit I can't believe is still happening in 2026 but here we are": 1+ million photo IDs and selfies from a hotel check-in system left publicly exposed online for anyone to find.
This is the latest example of a company leaking government-issued IDs in recent months.
@zackwhittaker remember to always have a fake ID for age verification and checking in to a hotel. It's like using a VPN but for ID checks, basic security hygiene
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Filed under "shit I can't believe is still happening in 2026 but here we are": 1+ million photo IDs and selfies from a hotel check-in system left publicly exposed online for anyone to find.
This is the latest example of a company leaking government-issued IDs in recent months.
I really want to make two important points about this story.
I get there's a lot of AI buzz right now, but companies *still* aren't doing basic cybersecurity stuff. That's what's mostly causing major hacks and data lapses of late.
Plus: Governments rolling out age-verification laws and private companies expanding "know your customer" ID checks should seriously think again. Exposed passports and driver's licenses undermine these already-crap systems.
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R relay@relay.mycrowd.ca shared this topic
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Filed under "shit I can't believe is still happening in 2026 but here we are": 1+ million photo IDs and selfies from a hotel check-in system left publicly exposed online for anyone to find.
This is the latest example of a company leaking government-issued IDs in recent months.
@zackwhittaker why the fuck do hotels even ask for your ID anyway ...
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@zackwhittaker why the fuck do hotels even ask for your ID anyway ...
@Li @zackwhittaker Because it is a legal requirement to see the id and provide a meldeschein. Some even scan your passport
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I really want to make two important points about this story.
I get there's a lot of AI buzz right now, but companies *still* aren't doing basic cybersecurity stuff. That's what's mostly causing major hacks and data lapses of late.
Plus: Governments rolling out age-verification laws and private companies expanding "know your customer" ID checks should seriously think again. Exposed passports and driver's licenses undermine these already-crap systems.
@zackwhittaker that kind of news, the emerging of AI discovering vulnerabilities everywhere makes me seriously reconsider my blue team job.
Not worth it anymore, does it?
Either switch to red team or another field in computing.Probably AI since totally computer science illiterate
get praised more than any other IT staff nowadays 
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I really want to make two important points about this story.
I get there's a lot of AI buzz right now, but companies *still* aren't doing basic cybersecurity stuff. That's what's mostly causing major hacks and data lapses of late.
Plus: Governments rolling out age-verification laws and private companies expanding "know your customer" ID checks should seriously think again. Exposed passports and driver's licenses undermine these already-crap systems.
@zackwhittaker wouldn't the value of any one individual ID and accompanying info, go down to close to zero when so many of them get 'inadvertently published'? Like how many personal data has to be stolen before it becomes no longer a viable business model to steal it?
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I really want to make two important points about this story.
I get there's a lot of AI buzz right now, but companies *still* aren't doing basic cybersecurity stuff. That's what's mostly causing major hacks and data lapses of late.
Plus: Governments rolling out age-verification laws and private companies expanding "know your customer" ID checks should seriously think again. Exposed passports and driver's licenses undermine these already-crap systems.
@zackwhittaker wow public bucket. First thing to do at a new job to learn the AWS infra is scan all the S3 buckets for public and for encryption. And versioning (to know how much caution is needed ).