Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Watch out for this phishing scam impersonating Booking.com

Add as a preferred source on Google
Woman pulling out credit card in front of laptop.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

If you work in hospitality and find an email in your inbox from Booking.com claiming to be an angry guest, then watch out — it may well be part of a phishing scam. Microsoft has warned that a phishing campaign has been underway sending fake emails from Booking.com which lead users to download malicious software.

In a blog post about the issue, Microsoft Threat Intelligence writes that this is an ongoing campaign which has been around since December last year, and uses a social engineering technique called ClickFix. The victim receives an email which appears to come from Booking.com and which can vary widely in its content — from guest complaints to requests for information from potential guests to account verification — and which includes a link (or attaches a PDF with a link) that claims to take the user to Booking.com to deal with the issue.

Recommended Videos

When users click on the link, they see a screen which appears to be a CAPTCHA overlay over a Booking.com page, but the CAPTCHA actually instructs the user to open up Windows Run and copy and past a command which downloads malware onto their system.

Once installed, the malware can steal financial data and credentials, a technique which Microsoft identifies as in line with a previous phishing campaign by a group it calls Storm-1865.

Phishing scams are unfortunately not unusual today, however this is a fairly sophisticated version which takes advantage of hospitality workers’ worries about guest satisfaction. To protect yourself from this and other phishing attempts, Microsoft advises users to check the sender’s address on a email, to be wary of messages about urgent threats, and to hover over links to see the full URL before clicking on them. When in doubt, go directly to the service provider — in this case, by going straight to Booking.com — rather than clicking on a link.

Update 03/14/25:

Booking.com provided the following statement:

“Unfortunately, phishing attacks by criminal organizations pose a significant threat to many industries. While we can confirm that Booking.com’s systems have not been breached, we are aware that unfortunately some of our accommodation partners and customers have been impacted by phishing attacks sent by professional criminals, with the criminal intent of taking over their local computer systems with malware.

“The actual numbers of accommodations affected by this scam are a small fraction of those on our platform and we continue to make significant investments to limit the impact on our customers and partners.

“We are also committed to proactively helping our accommodation partners and customers to stay protected. We also provide ongoing cybersecurity education and resources to our partners to enhance their defenses against such threats.

“Should a customer have any concern about a payment message, we ask them to carefully check the payment policy details on their booking confirmation to be sure that the message is legitimate. Customers are also encouraged to report any suspicious messages to our 24/7 customer service team or by clicking on ‘report an issue’ which is included in the chat function.

“It is important to note that we would never ask a customer to share payment information via email, chat messages, text messages, or phone.We urge our customers and partners to remain vigilant. If you encounter any communication that seems suspicious or requests sensitive information through unofficial channels, please do not engage. Report it immediately to our customer service team through official Booking.com channels. Our Trust and Safety Resource Center offers additional guidance on recognizing and avoiding phishing attempts.”

Georgina Torbet
Georgina has been the space writer at Digital Trends space writer for six years, covering human space exploration, planetary…
AI may have just won a literary prize. My heart weeps seeing it poison our love for books.
updated book and AI photo

I had a hard time processing this news. As someone who has been deeply in love with stories since childhood and who grew up on the works of Arthur Conan Doyle, Terry Pratchett, J.R.R. Tolkien, and other such venerable authors, seeing an AI-written story win a prestigious writing award is hard to digest. 

If you are unaware, the winners for the Commonwealth Short Story Prize for 2026 were announced, and three of the five winning regional stories have been found to be entirely or partially written by AI. Or at least that seems to be the consensus among readers. As a reader and an amateur fiction writer, this hurt me deeper than any other tale of AI corroding our lives.

Read more
Canva and Adobe are coming to Gemini, and they want to make everything chatty
Adobe and Canva are plugging into Google’s assistant, betting that creative work starts with a prompt, not an app icon
Art, Collage, Photography

Canva and Adobe are moving deeper into Google Gemini, giving the assistant a bigger role before users ever open a design app.

Adobe says its "Adobe for creativity" connector is coming to Gemini in the coming weeks, giving users a way to describe tasks and send them through Adobe tools for imaging, design, and video. Canva is already rolling out its Connected App for Gemini in select English-language markets, with full availability coming soon.

Read more
AI can pass the Turing Test in live chats and appear more human than us. I am spooked now
UC San Diego researchers found GPT-4.5 was judged human 73% of the time in live conversations
Image of a human woman next to an AI-generated face with Real or Fake text at the bottom.

AI can pass the Turing Test in live chats, and the latest result lands with a chill. In a UC San Diego study, GPT-4.5 outperformed real participants at convincing judges there was a person on the other side.

The setup was harder to shrug off than a standard benchmark. Judges reacted to real-time exchanges rather than static prompts, then made a fast call based on conversation alone.

Read more