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Data of millions of Georgians released in massive data leak
Cybernews reported that this was not the first time millions of personal information of Georgian citizens was leaked.
Cybernews reported that this was not the first time millions of personal information of Georgian citizens was leaked.
The Personal Data Protection Service of Georgia has fined Ridetech Georgia LLC, the company which provides the Yandex taxi apps, ₾4,000 ($1,500) for sharing the personal information of users and drivers in Georgia with Russia. On Monday, the agency said they had discovered during an inspection that the Yandex GO app for passengers and the Yandex Pro app for drivers connected to servers in Russia as part of the process of verifying users had an internet connection. In doing so, the IP addres
Russian hackers have reportedly hacked into an Armenian government-operated database. Armenia has previously been the target of a number of cyberattacks by Russian hackers amidst an ongoing deterioration of its relations with Russia. Reports of the attack first emerged on Wednesday, with RFE/RL citing a Telegram post in a private, inaccessible channel allegedly run by a Russian hacking group that claimed to have successfully infiltrated the database using an FTP code transfer system. ‘The da
The websites of Georgia’s President and two leading TV stations have been temporarily taken offline in an apparent cyberattack by Russian hackers. The website of Georgian President Salome Zurabishvili was offline on Friday morning, with local media reporting that the site initially displayed a message attributing the attack to a Russian hacking network. Screenshots purportedly of the site showed the message ‘HACKED BY COZY BEAR SLAVA [glory to] RUSSIA’ on a black background with an image of
Azerbaijani news outlet Mikroskop has been taken offline in an apparent ransomware attack, with its management speculating that the government could be behind the attack. Mikroskop’s website was taken down on Saturday with a message purportedly from the attackers appearing demanding 0.5 bitcoin ($13,000) to unblock the website. The website remained offline as of Monday morning. The outlet’s co-founder, editor-in-chief Fatima Karimova, told OC Media that a hacker group was behind the attack.
Russia’s military intelligence service, the GRU, was behind a massive cyberattack on Georgia in October 2019 that affected around 15,000 websites, British intelligence has alleged. The websites affected included those of major government institutions, broadcasters, online newspapers, and private businesses. Most of the hacked websites went offline or displayed a sliding image of a smiling former Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili with the text: ‘I’ll be back’. [Read more about the cybera
Around 15,000 websites in Georgia including those of major government institutions, broadcasters and online newspapers, and private businesses have been hit by a large-scale cyber attack. Websites affected included those of TV channels Imedi, Maestro, and Pirveli, the National Bank of Georgia, the president’s office, and online news outlets Tabula and Georgia Today. The attack began on Monday morning with more sites being hit throughout the day. Most of the hacked websites went offline