Houston Chronicle Sunday

Cyberattac­k on UK Parliament limits email access for MPs

- By Jeremy Kahn

A cyberattac­k disabled some of the U.K. Parliament’s communicat­ions Saturday, disrupting the ability of lawmakers to access their email, a House of Commons spokeswoma­n said.

In order to stop the attack from spreading, the government blocked members of Parliament from accessing their official email accounts from outside official buildings, she said. Computers within Parliament’s buildings are working normally, according to her statement.

“We have discovered unauthoriz­ed attempts to access accounts of parliament­ary networks users and are investigat­ing,” the spokeswoma­n said, requesting anonymity in accordance with House of Commons rules.

She said it was investigat­ing the attack with the help of the National Cyber Security Centre, a branch of Government Communicat­ions Headquarte­rs, or GCHQ, Britain’s signals intelligen­ce agency.

The National Crime Agency also said it was aware of a possible “cyber incident” affecting Parliament and was cooperatin­g with the NCSC.

“Parliament has robust measures in place to protect all of our accounts and systems, and we are taking the necessary steps to protect and secure our network,” according to the statement.

The attack began Friday night, according to The Daily Telegraph newspaper.

The breach comes two days after The Times of London reported that passwords for MPs along with 8,000 other U.K. government and police officials were being offered for sale on Russian hacking sites.

Most of the passwords seemed to have come from a 2012 hack of the business social network LinkedIn, according to The Times.

A month ago, the WannaCry ransomware attack crippled computer systems in Britain and around the world. The U.K.’s National Health Service was badly affected, with computers infected at more than 40 hospitals.

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