Hacker group claims it accessed data from Israeli education sites
A hacker group called "The Generous Thief" claimed
on Monday that it had stolen the data of millions of former and current Israeli
students and teachers, providing Excel files with addresses, ID numbers, emails
and more.
The hackers claimed to have hacked the Center for
Educational Technology (CET) and the National Digital Affairs Directorate's Campus.il
website, accessing educational files and personal information of millions of
users.
"The Generous Thief" appeared to offer the data
for sale, stating that people interested in accessing the stolen data should
send them a message.
The hacker group presented itself as a group acting in
protest against what it called "the dirty government" of Prime
Minister Yair Lapid. Despite the claim, the channel is written in broken
Hebrew, raising suspicions that the hackers are not Israeli.
CET confirms 'cyber incident' hit systems
The CET confirmed to Israeli media that it had found
"indications of a cyber incident" on its systems and was handling the
situation in coordination with the National Cyber Directorate.
The company stressed that its systems were still working and
that there were no indications as of yet that any information was stolen.
"We note that the network is saturated with disinformation and fake news
in light of the desire to deepen the disruption of studies."
Cyber attacks against educational institutions on the rise
A report by the cyber security company Sophos in August
found that most educational institutions — Primary schools, secondary schools
and colleges — are increasingly affected by ransomware, with 60% of
institutions attacked in 2021 compared to 44% in 2020.
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