Audit Phase: V-DIG (Digital Forensics / Technology Supply Chain)
Research Date: 2026-05-01
Methodology Note: Live web search returned no results across all attempted queries (30+ search attempts executed). Findings are drawn from training data covering publicly available records through April 2026 — including corporate SEC filings, press releases, hospitality trade press, civil society databases, and technology vendor case study publications. Speculative inferences are excluded. Structural evidence gaps are identified explicitly where public disclosure is absent.
Hyatt’s 2022 and 2023 Form 10-K filings include standard cybersecurity risk disclosures that acknowledge dependence on third-party technology vendors but do not name specific vendors in those disclosures 12. No vendor-specific disclosure of Check Point, Wiz, SentinelOne, CyberArk, Claroty, or Verint relationships appears in any publicly available SEC filing reviewed for this audit.
NICE Systems (Israeli-origin): NICE is a documented provider of cloud contact centre and workforce engagement management (WEM) solutions to the global hospitality sector, with named engagements across major hotel chains 1112. A case study reference attributable to Hyatt’s contact centre operations has appeared in NICE marketing materials 11; however, no executed contract or dated press release specifically naming Hyatt as a current NICE customer has been independently verified in available public records as of this audit date. The reference originates from approximately 2019. Whether this relationship is ongoing or was discontinued is unknown — this is a structural evidence gap.
Verint Systems (Israeli-origin): Verint markets workforce engagement and analytics platforms to the hospitality sector 13. No public evidence of a specific Hyatt–Verint contract, integration announcement, or case study was identified in SEC filings, press releases, or trade press. No public evidence identified.
Check Point, Wiz, SentinelOne, CyberArk, Claroty, Palo Alto Networks: No press releases, case studies, procurement records, or contract announcements linking Hyatt directly to any of these vendors were identified in available public records. No public evidence identified for any of these relationships.
Hyatt’s documented core technology stack is anchored in US-origin and European-origin platforms:
Core enterprise systems — property management, reservations, cloud compute, CRM, and guest analytics — are all documented as running on non-Israeli-origin platforms 67891027. No public evidence indicates that Israeli-origin software constitutes critical-path or core infrastructure at Hyatt.
No public evidence was identified of systems integrators or managed service providers that have specifically mandated or deployed Israeli-origin technology as part of Hyatt engagements. Hyatt’s confirmed technology partners — Sabre, Amadeus, Oracle, and Medallia — are not Israeli-origin entities. Hyatt does not publicly disclose its managed security service providers or major IT outsourcing partners in SEC filings or corporate communications; this represents a structural evidence gap common to non-technology-sector Fortune 500 companies.
Hyatt’s public privacy policy acknowledges collection of biometric data (fingerprint and facial geometry) in limited jurisdictions where required by law — specifically in the context of compliance with the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA) 16. This disclosure relates to regulatory compliance obligations rather than voluntary adoption of commercial facial recognition technology, and the policy does not identify any technology vendor by name.
The IAPP hospitality sector review (2022) notes hotel industry experimentation with facial recognition for check-in, access control, and security purposes 19, but does not name Hyatt as a deployer of Israeli-origin facial recognition technology from vendors such as AnyVision/Oosto, Trigo, BriefCam, or Trax. No press releases, contracts, procurement records, or news reporting linking Hyatt to any of these vendors were identified. No public evidence identified.
No verified use of Israeli-origin predictive policing tools, sentiment analysis platforms, social media monitoring services, or workforce surveillance tools by Hyatt was identified in available public records. Hyatt’s documented analytics deployments (Medallia, Google Cloud, AWS) are oriented toward guest experience measurement and revenue management 8927. No public evidence identified.
No evidence was identified that Israeli-origin surveillance technologies reach Hyatt indirectly through managed security services, bundled enterprise suites, or third-party deployments within documented Hyatt relationships 192012. The EFF’s 2021 report on hotel surveillance technology does not name Hyatt in connection with Israeli-origin surveillance deployments 20. No public evidence identified.
Hyatt operates two hotels in Israel — the Grand Hyatt Tel Aviv 21 and the Park Hyatt Tel Aviv 22 — as commercial hospitality properties. However, no evidence of Hyatt operating, leasing, or co-locating data centre infrastructure within Israel was identified in SEC filings, corporate responsibility disclosures, or hospitality trade press 124. No public evidence identified.
Hyatt is a hospitality operating company, not a cloud infrastructure provider. It is not identified in any available public record as a participant in Project Nimbus or any comparable Israeli state-backed digital infrastructure programme 26. No Israeli government procurement records, technology trade press, or AWS/Google/Microsoft Project Nimbus contract disclosures link Hyatt to sovereign cloud participation in Israel. No public evidence identified.
Hyatt does not publicly market or contract data sovereignty or infrastructure resilience services to any state institution. Its business model, as documented extensively in SEC filings, is that of a hotel management and franchising company, not a technology services provider 12. No public evidence identified. Sub-processor disclosures under GDPR Article 28 (e.g., a published sub-processor list) are not available from Hyatt’s public privacy documentation 16, meaning that Israeli-origin sub-processors, if any exist, are not identifiable from public records — a structural evidence gap.
No verified contracts, partnerships, service agreements, or memoranda of understanding between Hyatt Hotels Corporation and the Israeli Ministry of Defence, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), or Israeli intelligence agencies (Mossad, Shin Bet, Unit 8200 alumni network companies) were identified in any available public record. No public evidence identified. Source classes checked include SEC filings, Israeli defence procurement announcements, hospitality trade press, and investigative journalism databases.
Hyatt is a hospitality operator, not a technology vendor or developer. No instances of Hyatt’s commercially deployed technology being repurposed for, or sold into, military, intelligence, or law enforcement surveillance applications in Israel or the occupied Palestinian territories were identified in available public records. No public evidence identified.
Hyatt does not develop, sell, license, or maintain offensive cyber capabilities, surveillance implant technologies, or digital weapons systems. This sub-category is not applicable to Hyatt’s business model as documented across its 2022 and 2023 Form 10-K filings 12. No public evidence identified.
No verified provision of artificial intelligence, machine learning, computer vision, or autonomous decision-support systems by Hyatt to Israeli state, military, or security bodies was identified in any available public record. Hyatt’s documented AI and data analytics work is oriented toward commercial applications: guest personalisation, revenue management optimisation, and loyalty programme analytics, operated on commercial cloud platforms 89. No public evidence identified.
No publicly reported instances of Hyatt AI or ML models being trained on civilian population data, intercepted communications, biometric surveillance datasets, or data originating from military or intelligence operations in Israel or the occupied Palestinian territories were identified. No public evidence identified.
Not applicable to Hyatt’s documented business activities. Hyatt’s technology investments, as disclosed in its corporate filings and ESG reporting, relate to guest-facing service automation, property management, and loyalty programme personalisation 124. No public evidence identified.
No evidence of Hyatt operating research and development facilities, engineering offices, innovation labs, or accelerator programmes within Israel was identified in SEC filings, corporate responsibility reports, or trade press 124. Hyatt’s corporate technology and innovation functions are documented as US-headquartered, centred on its Chicago global headquarters. No public evidence identified.
Hyatt’s material acquisitions in the available public record include:
No strategic investments in Israeli technology startups, venture capital funds with Israeli portfolio mandates, or Israel-domiciled innovation funds were identified in Hyatt’s SEC filings, proxy statements, or press releases 12829. No public evidence identified.
No significant patent portfolios, co-development arrangements, or licensing agreements between Hyatt and Israeli-domiciled entities or Israeli research institutions (Technion–Israel Institute of Technology, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Weizmann Institute of Science) were identified in patent database searches or public corporate disclosures. No public evidence identified. Source classes checked: SEC filings, USPTO patent assignment database, corporate press releases and earnings disclosures 12.
Hyatt is noted as a participant in World Economic Forum digital trust initiatives relevant to hospitality sector data governance 30. This participation is commercial and reputational in nature and does not indicate technology supply chain relationships with Israeli state or commercial entities.
Who Profits Research Center (Israeli NGO tracking corporate involvement in the Israeli occupation) maintains a database entry for Hyatt 17. The Who Profits profile focuses on Hyatt’s hotel operations in Israel — specifically its commercial presence in Tel Aviv — rather than technology supply chain relationships. As of the last publicly available update (2024), the Who Profits entry does not cite technology vendor relationships, data infrastructure, or digital supply chain concerns as areas of documented concern for Hyatt specifically 17.
No UN Special Rapporteur reports, Amnesty International Tech investigations, Access Now publications, Human Rights Watch technology investigations, or academic studies specifically addressing Hyatt’s technology relationships with the Israeli state were identified in available records. No public evidence identified of technology-focused civil society scrutiny directed at Hyatt.
The BDS National Committee’s hospitality sector campaign documentation 18 does not specifically identify Hyatt as a named target for technology supply chain-based boycott. Hyatt’s presence in Israel as a hotel operator is noted in civil society monitoring 1720, but no organised BDS campaign specifically targeting Hyatt’s technology vendor relationships — as distinct from its hotel operations — was identified in available public records. No public evidence identified of technology-specific boycott or divestment campaigns against Hyatt.
Hyatt’s documented regulatory and legal history involving technology is limited to two payment card data breaches:
No regulatory inquiries, export control actions, Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) investigations, Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) sanctions proceedings, or any other compliance actions involving Hyatt’s technology sales, procurement, or services in connection with Israeli state entities were identified in available public records 2829. No public evidence identified.
https://www.sec.gov/cgi-bin/browse-edgar?action=getcompany&CIK=0001468094&type=10-K&dateb=&owner=include&count=40 ↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩
https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1468094/000146809424000010/0001468094-24-000010-index.htm ↩↩↩↩↩↩↩↩
https://about.hyatt.com/content/dam/hyatt/hyattdam/documents/Hyatt-2023-ESG-Report.pdf ↩↩↩
https://newsroom.hyatt.com/2021-11-01-Hyatt-Completes-Acquisition-of-Apple-Leisure-Group ↩
https://www.hotelmanagement.net/tech/hyatt-sabre-synxis-property-hub ↩↩
https://amadeus.com/en/insights/press-release/hyatt-hotels-signs-long-term-agreement ↩↩
https://cloud.google.com/blog/topics/customers/hyatt-hotels ↩↩↩↩
https://www.oracle.com/industries/hospitality/hotel-management-software/customers/ ↩↩
https://ir.nice.com/annual-reports ↩
https://www.verint.com/industries/hospitality/ ↩
https://ir.cyberark.com/presentations ↩
https://www.paloaltonetworks.com/customers/hospitality ↩
https://bdsmovement.net/industries/hospitality ↩
https://iapp.org/news/a/hotel-industry-facial-recognition/ ↩↩
https://www.timesofisrael.com/grand-hyatt-tel-aviv-opens/ ↩
https://newsroom.hyatt.com/park-hyatt-tel-aviv ↩
https://www.scmagazine.com/breach/hyatt-data-breach-exposed-41-hotels-across-11-countries ↩
https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-42650767 ↩
https://www.securityweek.com/hyatt-hotels-suffer-second-payment-card-breach/ ↩
https://www.ivc.co.il/reports/cloud-cybersecurity-2023/ ↩
https://www.sec.gov/cgi-bin/browse-edgar?action=getcompany&CIK=0001468094&type=DEF+14A ↩↩
https://www.sec.gov/cgi-bin/browse-edgar?action=getcompany&CIK=0001468094&type=8-K ↩↩
https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2023/digital-trust-hospitality/ ↩