While
Obama talks cyber security, his hotel's computer system fails
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[February 16, 2015]
By Jeff Mason
RANCHO MIRAGE, Calif. (Reuters) - It may
not have been a hacking, but a computer outage at the hotel where U.S.
President Barack Obama resided this week could not have come at a more
inconvenient time.
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The president flew to San Francisco on Thursday to preach the
benefits of better corporate cybersecurity practices. The entire two
days he was in town, the computer system at his upscale hotel, The
Fairmont, was down.
"There's certainly no evidence to say anything was hacked or
compromised," said Thomas Klein, the hotel's general manager, noting
the irony of Obama's attendance at a cybersecurity summit during the
same period.
"It' just a coincidence in timing."
Upon arriving at the hotel on Thursday night, members of the
president's entourage were told that the hotel's operating system
had stopped working. Rather than swiping credit cards at the front
desk, they filled out paper forms instead.
By Saturday morning, the problem still had not been fixed.
At checkout, a hotel employee took guests' email addresses in order
to send them their receipts.
Klein said he alerted the Secret Service about the issue.
"They checked into it ... and they said no, they have no evidence of
any hacking," he said. "It was a hardware issue that impacted the
hotel operating system."
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A Secret Service spokesman declined to comment.
At Friday's summit, Obama asked U.S. corporate executives to
cooperate more with each other and the government in defending
against hackers after high-profile attacks on companies such as Sony
that exposed weaknesses in U.S. cyber defenses.
Obama left San Francisco on Saturday morning for California's Palm
Springs area, where he is spending the weekend golfing.
(Additional reporting by Kevin Lamarque; Editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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