Las Vegas Review-Journal

Hackers: CCSD’S data now uploaded

District states it can’t verify claim

- By Aleksandra Appleton

The hacker group behind the Clark County School District’s security breach claims to have uploaded all of the stolen data to its website — including informatio­n on current and former employees such as names and Social Security numbers.

An update posted to the group’s website last week claims that 100 percent of

An update posted to the group’s website last week claims that 100 percent of the data from the Aug. 27 attack has been uploaded.

the data from the Aug. 27 attack has been uploaded — though ultimately only the criminals and possibly the district would know if that’s true, said Brett Callow, a threat analyst at cybersecur­ity company Emisoft.

A Wall Street Journal report over the weekend said the data includes student names and grades and was published because the ransom demanded by the group had not been paid. District officials have not answered questions from the Review-journal about whether it had paid any money to the group.

In a statement Monday morning, CCSD representa­tives said the district is not able to verify the claims about the attacks in national media reports but will notify affected individual­s as the investigat­ion continues.

“CCSD is working diligently to determine the full

nature and scope of the incident and is cooperatin­g with law enforcemen­t,” the statement said.

A hotline for affected parties has been set up at 888-490-0594, though one former employee reported to the Review-journal that he could not reach a representa­tive on the line last week.

The district is facing a lose-lose situation, said Callow, and whether it pays the ransom or not, it must grapple with the fact that it has had a breach.

The group behind the hack has also targeted schools in Fairfax, Virginia, and Toledo, Ohio, he said, and local government­s across the country have also had their data stolen and published.

“If the organizati­on doesn’t pay, the stolen data will be published in a series of installmen­ts. If the organizati­on pays, it will simply get a pinky promise from the criminals that the stolen data will be destroyed and not misused,” Callow said. “One thing that should be kept in mind is that ransomware is only a problem because organizati­ons pay ransoms.

“If nobody paid, there’d be no more ransomware.”

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