Madison Square Garden leak exposes secret list tracking 40,000 celebrities
A hack of Madison Square Garden revealed a database of nearly 40,000 public figures, with labels on sexual orientation and risk ratings tied to criticism of owner James Dolan.
Madison Square Garden, New York’s most famous arena, was keeping an unflattering secret: an internal database of nearly 40,000 names from entertainment, politics, sport and business, now exposed by a hack. Among the recorded fields were labels on sexual orientation and risk ratings that, with suspicious frequency, lined up with public criticism of the venue’s owner, James Dolan.
What was in the Madison Square Garden database?
According to the US press investigation that reviewed the files, the talent list included dozens of public figures tagged with LGBTQ labels and roughly 400 people carrying a risk rating — from flagged to high risk — that often appeared to reflect whether the person had criticised Dolan, executive chairman of MSG Sports and Entertainment. The practices reportedly extended to the group’s other venues, including the Sphere in Las Vegas and Radio City Music Hall.
How did the hack happen?
A group calling itself ShinyHunters tricked an employee over the phone — the technique known as vishing — and gained access to the company’s systems. When the ransom demand went unpaid, the data was published. The company, now facing several federal class-action lawsuits, keeps its corporate communications on the official MSG website.
The irony writes its own screenplay: an arena that makes its living hosting stars spent its time cataloguing them behind their backs. After Harry lost his privacy case against the Daily Mail, this story shows the coin’s other face — when the one watching the celebrities is not a tabloid but the venue itself.
By Lucy Bennett
Image: Ajay Suresh from New York, NY, USA / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 2.0)