Technology & Innovation

Names of children, pictures and stolen addresses in a breach of penetration


The infiltrators say they stole pictures, names and addresses of about 8,000 children from the Kido Nursery Series.

The cyber criminals gang use very sensitive information to demand a ransom from the company, which includes 18 locations in and around London, with more in the United States and India.

Criminals also have information about children’s parents and caree providers as well as protecting notes.

They claim that they have contacted some parents over the phone as part of their extortion tactics.

BBC Kido called for comment. The calls of the infiltrators have not yet performed.

However, the employee in one of the nurseries confirmed that he was notified of violating the data.

Chection Check Point described the Cyber-Seccury Company targeting the nursery as “new low”.

One of her experts, Grame Stuart, said: “The status of children and schools in the shooting line is an unimaginable thing. Frankly, it is terrible.”

It seems that the piracy group responsible for the claims is relatively new and is called radioactive.

The BBC criminals called on the penetration and then published details of their website.

A sample of data has been published there, including photos and personal files of 10 children from the stolen data collection.

It was published as part of their attempt to extort the money from the nursery chain, which includes 18 of the nursery, most of them in the London region.

The police advise not to pay a ransom because it increases the ecosystem of electronic crime.

When BBC News was asked whether they were badly about blackmailing a nursery using children’s data, criminals said they were “not asking a huge amount” and they “deserve some compensation for our experts.”

The “Pentest” – or the penetration test – is the term when the moral infiltrators are appointed to assess the security of the organization in a controlled and professional manner.

These infiltrators attacked the nursery chain without their permission.

“Of course” is about money, and they admitted to the BBC.

The penetration is the latest in a series of prominent electronic attacks, which witnessed the stoppage of production to stopping in Jaguar Land RoverAnd it caused a massive disturbance to Ms and Cooperative.

Rebecca Modi, head of data research at the comparative software company, said the nature of the data published online that was raised “the warning bells”.

“We have seen some low demands of ransom gangs before, but this seems to be a completely different level,” she said.

She said that the company should contact anyone affected by the violation of the data “as an issue of urgency.”

BBC approached the National Crime Agency for Comment.

Additional reports by Graham Fraser, technology correspondent

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