Security expert says she helped a casino whose high-roller database was stolen through an Internet of Shit fish-tank thermometer

Darktrace CEO Nicole Eagan's presentation to last week's WSJ CEO Council Conference in London included an anaecdote about an unnamed casino for whom her firm had done work; they uncovered a data-breach in which an insecure Internet of Things thermometer in the casino's lobby was used to gain access to the internal network, from which vantage the attackers were able to extract and steal a database of high rollers.


Eagan gave one memorable anecdote about a case Darktrace worked on in which a casino was hacked via a thermometer in an aquarium in the lobby.

"The attackers used that to get a foothold in the network," she said. "They then found the high-roller database and then pulled that back across the network, out the thermostat, and up to the cloud."


Hackers once stole a casino's high-roller database through a thermometer in the lobby fish tank
[Oscar Williams-Grut/Business Insider]

(Images: Pee-Wee's Playhouse; David Whelan, CC-0; Raul654, CC-BY-SA)