Most hotel chains these days rely on some sort of electronic key card mechanism rather than more traditional locks.
Researchers at
F-Secure have found that hotels worldwide are using an electronic lock system with a flaw that could be exploited by an attacker to gain access to any room in the building.
The attack involves using any ordinary electronic key to the target facility -- even one that's long expired, discarded, or used to access spaces such as a garage or closet. Using information on the key, the researchers are able to create a master key with privileges to open any room in the building. What's more the attack can be performed without being noticed, leaving no sign of entry.
"You can imagine what a malicious person could do with the power to enter any hotel room, with a master key created basically out of thin air," says Tomi Tuominen, practice leader at F-Secure Cyber Security Services. "We don't know of anyone else performing this particular attack in the wild right now."