Indonesia’s national data center has suffered a cyberattack by a hacking group demanding an $8 million ransom.More than 200 government agencies at national and regional levels have been affected since the attack began last Thursday.Some services, like immigration, have been restored, but efforts are ongoing to recover others such as investment licensing.Indonesia’s national data center has been compromised by a hacking group asking for a $8 million ransom that the government says it won’t pay.The cyberattack has disrupted services of more than 200 government agencies at both the national and regional levels since last Thursday, said Samuel Abrijani Pangerapan, the director general of informatics applications with the Communications and Informatics Ministry.Some government services have returned — immigration services at airports and elsewhere are now functional — but efforts continue at restoring other services such as investment licensing, Pangerapan told reporters Monday.FRONTIER FALLOUT AS 750K CUSTOMERS’ DATA EXPOSED IN RANSOMHUB CYBERATTACKThe attackers have held data hostage and offered a key for access in return for the $8 million ransom, said PT Telkom Indonesia’s director of network & IT solutions, Herlan Wijanarko, without giving further details. Officers check the passports of passengers leaving for Singapore at the immigration checkpoint of the Bandar Bentan Telani ferry terminal on Bintan Island, Indonesia, on May 15, 2024. Indonesia’s national data center has been compromised by a hacking group asking for an $8 million ransom that the government says it won’t pay. (AP Photo/Dita Alangkara, File)Wijanarko said the company, in collaboration with authorities at home and abroad, is investigating and trying to break the encryption that made data inaccessible.Communication and Informatics Minister Budi Arie Setiadi told journalists that the government won’t pay the ransom.”We have tried our best to carry out recovery while the (National Cyber and Crypto Agency) is currently carrying out forensics,” Setiadi added.The head of that agency, Hinsa Siburian, said they had detected samples of the Lockbit 3.0 ransomware.Pratama Persadha, Indonesia’s Cybersecurity Research Institute chairman, said the current cyberattack was the most severe in a series of ransomware attacks that have hit Indonesian government agencies and companies since 2017.CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP”The disruption to the national data center and days-long needed to recover the system means this ransomware attack was extraordinary,” Persadha said. “It shows that our cyber infrastructure and its server systems were not being handled well.”He said a ransomware attack would be meaningless if the government had a good backup that could automatically take over the main server of the national data center during a cyberattack.Indonesia’s central bank was attacked by ransomware in 2022 but public services were not affected. The health ministry’s COVID-19 app was hacked in 2021, exposing the personal data and health status of 1.3 million people.Last year, an intelligence platform that monitors malicious activities in cyberspace, Dark Tracer, revealed that a hacker group known as the LockBit ransomware had claimed to have stolen 1.5 terabytes of data managed by Indonesia’s largest Islamic bank, Bank Syariah Indonesia.
Indonesia refuses to pay $8M ransom after national data center compromised by hackers
Related Posts
After a campaign like no other, the outcome will be just as groundbreaking
As the sun rose on Tuesday, there was something reassuringly familiar about the rituals that election day in America would bring: long queues of voters, candidates casting their own ballots,…
US election 2024 results: When will we know who won?
BBCAmerican voters go to the polls on Tuesday to choose their next president.US election results are sometimes declared within hours of the polls closing, but this year’s tight contest could…