Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Cyber Security

US food importer Atalanta admits ransomware attack

North American food importer Atalanta has admitted that it suffered a data breach involving employees’ personal information as the result of a ransomware attack.

In a statement issued on Wednesday (December 8), Atalanta outlined its incident response since the late July attack.

On July 25, 2021, Atalanta detected malicious activity on its network including the encryption of certain systems. Upon becoming aware of the malicious activity, Atalanta engaged third-party specialists and immediately began to remediate the situation, including conducting a forensic investigation into the incident.

The forensic investigation concluded that certain information related to Atalanta’s current and former employees as well as certain visitors was accessed and acquired as result of this incident. There is no indication to date of any misuse of the information involved.

Atalanta (not to be confused with the Italian football club of the same name) went on to say that it “moved quickly to investigate and identify the individuals whose information was potentially involved, and to implement additional security measures to further safeguard its systems and practices”.

The company, North America’s largest privately held specialty food importer, also offered general advice on resources that can help individuals guard against identity theft in cases where their private information has been exposed.

Pertinent questions

Atalanta’s statement leaves several pertinent questions unanswered, including around how many records were exposed and what personal information they contained.

Questions about how the attack happened in the first place and which strain of ransomware was involved in the attack also come to mind.

The Daily Swig put these questions to Atalanta. We’ll update our story as and when more information comes to hand.

Ransomware attacks against enterprises are increasingly common, a trend driven by the easy profits they offer cybercriminals, even if only a minority of victims actually pay up for decryption keys.

As recently reported by The Daily Swig, ransomware gangs are increasingly threatening to release samples of stolen data through data leak sites if marks resist their extortionate demands for payment.

Source: https://portswigger.net/daily-swig/us-food-importer-atalanta-admits-ransomware-attack

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Cyber Security

Telegram Messenger offers global, cloud-based instant messaging with several features:- Cybersecurity researchers at Securlist recently found several Telegram mods on Google Play in various...

Cyber Security

The cyberattack that ultimately led to the breach of several U.S. officials’ email accounts was the result of a China-based threat actor accessing a...

Cyber Security

AttackCrypt, an open-source “crypter,” was recently used by cybercriminals to hide malware binaries and avoid antivirus detection. A crypter is a kind of software that can...

Cyber Security

We are glad to present the most recent news on cybersecurity in this week’s Threat and Vulnerability Roundup from Cyber Writes.  The latest attack...

Copyright © 2023 Newsworthy News | Global | Political | Local | All News | Website By: Top Search SEO