The nurseries threaten to publish more children’s profiles
Joe TradeInternet correspondent, BBC World Service

The infiltrators with special pictures and data for thousands of nursery and their families say they will publish more information online unless they are paid.
Criminals who called themselves hacked the Kido Nursery series and published profiles from 10 children online on Thursday.
On their website on the dark web – part of the internet that was accessed using a specialized program – they have shared a “road leakage road map” saying, “The next steps for us are the version of 30” profiles “for each child and 100 private data employees.”
Kido did not respond to BBC requests to comment. But she works with authorities and police Met achieved.
Kido told parents that the breach happened when criminals reached their data hosted by a software service called Famly.
The program is widely used by custody organizations and childcare institutions, and says on its website that is used by more than a million “owners, managers, practitioners and families”.
“This malicious attack represents a new barbarian decline, as bad actors try to expose our younger children’s data to make a fast -pak,” Anders Laustsen President Anders Laustsen told BBC.
“We have conducted a comprehensive investigation of the accident and we can confirm that there was no violation of the security or infrastructure of Famly in any way and no other customers were affected.
“Of course we take data security and privacy seriously.”
The site of the criminals contains an exhibition consisting of 10 children with nursery pictures, the date of birth, the place of birth and details – such as those who live with the connection details.
BBC parents contacted those interested in hacking, as a mother received a threatening phone call from criminals.
The woman, who did not want to call it, says she received a phone call from infiltrators who said they would publish her child’s information on the Internet unless she pressed Kido to pay a ransom.
The mother described the call as a “threat.”
One of the parents, Stephen Gilbert, told BBC 4 today that someone in his parents’ WhatsApp collection also received a call.
“It was possible to put the details of children on the dark network, which is very worrying and worrying to me.”

But Sean, who has a child in the Kido nursery in Toting, called BBC News to say he sympathizes with the employees there.
“We are now in the digital age where everything is on the Internet and I think you are entering into this, knowing that there is a danger at some point that may happen,” he said.
“Any parents who are likely to be angry with their anger at the bacilli that have already done so.
“You only see the people who run your nursery, and they are all wonderful. These poor are the ones who get a weight in the confrontation line.”
“We are doing it for money.”
It is known that online criminals make calls for victim organizations for their pressure to pay a ransom.
But summoning individual victims is very rare.
In the conversations through the application of the correspondence, English -speaking criminals have indicated that the BBC is not their first language and claimed that they rented people to make calls.
It is a sign of the cruelty of criminals, but it is also a sign of despair as Kido does not comply.
The police advice is not to pay the pirate ransom at all because it encourages the criminal ecosystems.
The infiltrators first called BBC to violate them on Monday.
After publishing the first bath for children’s data online, I asked BBC if they were guilty of their sad behavior and criminals said: “We do this for money, and not for anything other than money.”
“I realize that we are criminals.”
“This is not my first time for me and it will not be my last time.”
But they also said that they would not target pre -school again because attention was very large.
They have since deleted their signal account and could no longer be contacted.
Participated in additional reports of James Kelly and Mary Leesfield.
