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    Home » Sections » Information security » Boeing hit by ransomware gang

    Boeing hit by ransomware gang

    Boeing, one of the world's largest defence and space contractors, said on Wednesday it was investigating a cyber incident.
    By Agency Staff2 November 2023
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    Boeing, one of the world’s largest defence and space contractors, said on Wednesday it was investigating a cyber incident that impacted elements of its parts and distribution business and cooperating with a law enforcement probe into it.

    Boeing acknowledged the incident days after the LockBit cybercrime gang said on Friday it had stolen “a tremendous amount” of sensitive data from the US plane maker that it would dump online if Boeing didn’t pay ransom by 2 November.

    The LockBit threat was no longer on the gang’s website as of Wednesday, and it didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. Boeing declined to comment on whether LockBit was behind the cyber incident it disclosed.

    We are actively investigating the incident and coordinating with law enforcement and regulatory authorities

    “This issue does not affect flight safety,” a Boeing spokesman said. “We are actively investigating the incident and coordinating with law enforcement and regulatory authorities. We are notifying our customers and suppliers.”

    Boeing’s parts and distribution business, which falls under its Global Services division, provides material and logistics support to its customers, according to the company’s 2022 annual report. Some web pages on the company’s official website that had information on the Global Services division were down on Wednesday, with a message that cited technical issues.

    “We expect the site to be back up soon,” the pages said.

    LockBit was the most active global ransomware group last year based on the number of victims, and it has hit 1 700 US organisations since 2020, according to the US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (Cisa).

    The hacking group typically deploys ransomware on a victim organisation’s system to lock it up, as well as stealing sensitive data for extortion.

    ‘Pinky promise’

    It’s unclear what data LockBit may have stolen from the company. Brett Callow, a ransomware expert and threat analyst at the cybersecurity firm Emsisoft, said that while organisations may pay cybercriminal gangs when demanded ransom, that doesn’t guarantee that data won’t be leaked.

    “Paying the ransom would simply elicit a pinky promise from LockBit that they will destroy whatever data they obtained,” Callow said. “There would, however, be no way of knowing for sure that they actually had.”

    Read: 40 countries vow not to pay ransomware attackers

    The loss of military-related information would be “extremely problematic”, he added. Boeing did not comment on whether any defence-related data had been impacted in the cyber incident.

    Cisa did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the Boeing statement.  — Valerie Insinna and Zeba Siddiqui, (c) 2023 Reuters

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