Geelong Advertiser

BREWERY HACKED

Little Creatures loses a week to cyber crims

- HARRISON TIPPET

ANOTHER Geelong business has been hit by hackers, with Little Creatures Brewery forced to halt beer production for a week after a ransomware attack on its owners.

Parent company Lion said beer shortages were expected across its business.

YET another Geelong business has been hit by a cyber attack, with Little Creatures Brewery forced to halt beer production for more than a week after a ransomware attack on its parent company.

It is the fourth attack to impact major Geelong organisati­ons and businesses over the past 12 months, with one cyber security expert warning: “This is the new normal”.

Little Creatures Brewery — which produces Furphy, Little Creatures and White Rabbit branded beers — resumed brewing, kegging and bottling on Tuesday, after systems were taken offline on June 9.

The company is owned by food and beverage giant Lion, which shut down its key IT systems “as a precaution” after being targeted by the ransomware attack.

Lion declined to say what level of beer production was impacted in Geelong, but a statement from the company this week said beer shortages were expected across the business.

“The latest impacts include a number of temporary shortages or out-of-stocks across both packaged (bottle/can) and keg brands,” the statement said.

“Across our Australian and New Zealand adult beverages businesses, we continue to have limited visibility of our products in our systems. We’re working to bring our breweries back online as soon as possible, hoping to get a number of our breweries back up and running very soon.

“We apologise to our consumers and customers, especially those who are only just getting their own venues back up and running following COVID-19 closures.”

Little Creatures is now the fourth local business to be hit by cyber attack since April last year.

Geelong Port was hit when an employee’s email account was hacked in April last year, potentiall­y exposing sensitive details of hundreds of customers, including informatio­n that could be used to commit serious identity thefts.

Barwon Health was then the victim of a ransomware attack in late September, which blocked access to IT systems at multiple regional public health services. It took about two months for Barwon Health’s systems to be fully restored.

Last month the City of Greater Geelong became the city’s next victim, when it pulled down its website after a malware attack. The council this month said there had been “no evidence of a data breach” as a result of the attack.

Geelong-based director of the RMIT University Centre for Cyber Security Research and Innovation Matt Warren said cyber attacks were becoming increasing­ly successful.

“It is the new normal,” Mr Warren said. “It’s not that there’s an increase in cyber attacks, but we’re seeing these attacks be more successful because what they’re focusing on is the human aspect.

“It also highlights that organisati­ons aren’t prepared for it.

“It’s actually a relatively easy cyber attack to recover from, but the problem is because organisati­ons have now become complex, they haven’t kept up their backup resilience strategy to reflect their operations.”

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AMBER ALERT

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