spot_img

Date:

Share:

Kaspersky warns travellers: AI-powered attacks are targeting hotel guests

Between June and August 2025, Kaspersky’s Global Research and Analysis Team (GReAT) discovered a new wave of cyberattacks by a threat group called RevengeHotels, which targets hotels to gain access to guests’ payment information. The group has been operating since 2015 and has since upgraded its methods. The threat actor is now using Artificial Intelligence (AI) to make their attacks more effective and reach additional regions. Analysis shows that many of the new malicious programs used in these attacks contain code likely generated with AI, making them more sophisticated and harder to detect.

While hotels in Brazil have been the main target to date, such cyberattacks have also been reported in other countries around the globe. And considering that countries in Africa, including South Africa and Kenya, are popular tourist destinations, and Nigeria a popular business travel destination, it is important to consider that no country or hotel is immune to falling victim.

How the attacks work

The threat actor sends phishing emails directly to hotel staff, often disguised as requests for reservation or job applications. Once a hotel employee interacts with these emails, malware called VenomRAT is installed on the hotel’s systems, giving attackers access to guests’ payment data and other sensitive information. The emails often look convincing, coming from legitimate-looking websites.

“Сybercriminals are increasingly using AI to create new tools and make their attacks more effective. This means that even familiar schemes, like phishing emails, are becoming harder to spot for a common user. For hotel guests, this translates into higher risks of card and personal data theft, even when you trust well-known hotels,” comments Lisandro Ubiedo, expert at Kaspersky’s Global Research and Analysis Team.

To stay safe, Kaspersky recommends:

  • Even if an email seems friendly, treat links and attachments with care. To protect your company, use solutions from the Kaspersky Next product line that provide real-time protection, threat visibility, investigation and response capabilities of EDR and XDR for organisations of any size and in any industry.
  • Cybercriminals often distribute fake email messages mimicking email notifications from an online store or a bank, luring a user to click on a malicious link and distribute malware. If attackers are specifically targeting your organisation, the email text may be more customised, mimicking services or scenarios familiar to your company. With that in mind, fine-tune your antispam settings and never open attachments sent by an unknown sender.
  • Try not to open unexpected files sent by you massively. They may be ransomware or even spyware, even attachments from official-looking emails.
spot_img
spot_img

━ More like this

Default BitLocker Configuration Isn’t Enough: Defending Endpoints Against Physical Attacks

Walk into any café, airport lounge, or hotel lobby and you’ll see the modern workplace in action. Laptops open, meetings happening over video, documents...

Seconds save lives: why data held at the edge is critical for faster patient diagnosis

When it comes to diagnosing and treating patients, every second counts, and being able to access the right information in real-time is critical. According to...

International Anti-Ransomware Day-2026: Kaspersky shares insights into ransomware trends and tactics

On International Anti-Ransomware Day, May 12, Kaspersky shares a report with an overview of ransomware trends that marked 2025 and insights into what the threat landscape...

Prevention alone won’t suffice for South African businesses; cyber resilience is the real defence

South Africa is no longer a bystander in the global cybercrime landscape but a primary target. A major ransomware attack earlier this year, in which a...

The AI arms race is changing cybersecurity economics

The cost of attacks is lowering faster than the cost of defence, and this is forcing a structural reset in how cyber-risk is priced,...
spot_img