• You are viewing the forum as a Guest, please login (you can use your Facebook, Twitter, Google or Microsoft account to login) or register using this link: Log in or Sign Up

Food For Thought With The Holiday Season Looming!

Dave Spencer

Member
Joined
3 Jul 2007
Messages
1,387
Location
N. Wales
This is pretty good info. Never even thought about key cards containing anything other than an access code for the room?

HOTEL KEY CARDS

Ever wonder what is on your magnetic key card?
Answer: -
a. Customer's name
b. Customer's partial home address
c. Hotel room number
d. Check-in date and out date
e. Customer's credit card number and expiration date!

When you turn them in to the front desk your personal information is there for any employee to access by simply scanning the card in the hotel scanner. An employee can take a hand full of cards home and using a scanning device, access the information onto a laptop computer and go shopping at your expense.

Simply put, hotels do not erase the information on these cards until an employee reissues the card to the next hotel guest. At that time, the new guest's information is electronically 'overwritten' on the card and the previous guest's information is erased in the overwriting process.

But until the card is rewritten for the next guest, it usually is kept in a drawer at the front desk with YOUR INFORMATION ON IT!

The bottom line is: Keep the cards, take them home with you, or destroy them. NEVER leave them behind in the room or room wastebasket, and NEVER turn them into the front desk when you check out of a room. They will not charge you for the card (it's illegal) and you'll be sure you are not leaving a lot of valuable personal information on it that could be easily lifted off with any simple scanning device card reader.

For the same reason, if you arrive at the airport and discover you still have the card key in your pocket, do not toss it in an airport bin. Take it home and destroy it by cutting it up, especially through the electronic information strip!

If you have a small magnet, pass it across the magnetic strip several times. Then try it in the door, it will not work. It erases everything on the card.

Information courtesy of: Metropolitan Police Service.

Dave.
 
This was on The Real Husle the other night :D
Alex was posing as staff, he went around saying there was a problem with the cards,and we are resetting them, so he swiped it on his macbook he as carrying around with him.
Took it home, transferred the info onto phone top-up cards, waited until they left the hotel, and he gained access and cleaned them out! :wideyed:
 
Once I saw someone swipe my card to take payment, then slyly try to swipe my card in a second 'black box' card reader. I swiftly moved around the counter and put my hand over the machine. They just grinned at me as if to say 'oh well it was worth a try'

Understandably I am a bit cautious now!

When my details are being stored rather than processed directly (like when hotels ask to 'pre-authorise' cards on check in) or if the card is likely to be taken out of site, I often decline and pay cash instead.
 
Back
Top