Excerpt from The Guardian
The website is sending out warnings to cancel cards after noticing suspicious activity
Three weeks after Observer Cash revealed that the Booking.com email system had been hacked and that a number of customers had had their credit card details compromised, it has emerged that the website has been sending emails to some customers warning them to cancel their cards. At the same time, others have come forward to say “me too”.
Those affected had either checked in, or were due to check in, to a hotel they had reserved using theBooking.com’s website or app. They had received an email – from the official noreply@booking.com address – warning their stay may have to be cancelled unless they handed over bank card details via an embedded link.
At the time of the original report Booking.com strenuously denied its system had been hacked and, instead, blamed the messages on breaches in the email systems of partner hotels.
This week it emerged Booking.com has been sending out emails warning its customers their card details may have been compromised, although it states this was just where it had uncovered “potentially suspicious activity” on a specific accommodation provider’s account.
Reader IA was contacted this week by the company despite not having made a reservation since June.
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