Some Interrail travellers told to cancel passports as hacked data posted online
Holidaymakers across Europe are facing the stress and expense of getting new passports after their personal data was posted on the dark web after a hack of the Interrail company Eurail. Personal data, including passport numbers, names, phone numbers, email and home addresses and dates of birth of more than 300,000 European travellers was accessed in December. Gerard Tubb, 64, a former broadcast journalist from Yorkshire who had bought Interrail tickets to travel with his wife to the south of...
Covering passports, posted, Covering digital transformation, this article examines emerging tech trends. This content contains bandwagon appeal propaganda elements (risk level: negligible). Looking at the analysis results, our credibility assessment is moderate (54/100), with 0 citation(s) and 0 named source(s). Furthermore, average values across all metrics; no particularly notable positive or negative features. Overall assessment: credibility is moderate, misinformation risk is negligible, pro
Covering data, eurail, Covering digital transformation, this article examines emerging tech trends. The content presents a data-rich structure with 0 citation(s), 0 entity reference(s), and 30 keyword(s). Moderate credibility, readability, and sentiment; a standard news profile emerges. Moreover, our grammar assessment is excellent (80/100); overall writing quality is fully meets.
Looking at the analysis results, warning: The text contains bandwagon appeal, with a persuasive language intensity rated negligible. According to our assessment, this article's credibility score is at a moderate level (54/100), supported by 0 citation(s). According to our assessment, our NLP-based bias detection rates this content as balanced (confidence: 50%).
Final assessment: credibility moderate, misinformation negligible, propaganda negligible; content should be read with this profile in mind.