While some of the public should worry about their social security and passport information being stolen, investors have a whole other set of issues to worry about.
properties on the Las Vegas Strip last month. But now new information from the company is shedding more light on just how damaging the attack really was.
The cyberattack on Sept. 11 has been claimed by a collective of hackers known as Scattered Spider, a subgroup of a larger criminal organization known as ALPHV. Its ransomware attack shut down everything from hotel reservation services to ATMs to slot machines at the MGM properties.In a regulatory filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, MGM admitted that hackers obtained some personal information belonging to customers who made transactions with the company prior to March 2019.
That information includes names, contact info, gender, dates of birth, and driver's license numbers. For some, the hackers were even able to collect social security and passport numbers from their attack. However, the company also says that it does not believe that customer passwords, bank account numbers or payment card information were obtained by the criminal actors.
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