Times Colonist

Nova Scotia says up to 100,000 people affected by online security breach

- KEITH DOUCETTE

As many as 100,000 Nova Scotians might have had sensitive personal informatio­n stolen in a global privacy breach affecting a file transfer system used by the provincial government, officials confirmed Tuesday.

Cybersecur­ity and Digital Solutions Minister Colton LeBlanc said a government investigat­ion indicates social insurance numbers, addresses and banking informatio­n of current employees of the public service, as well as those at Nova Scotia Health and the IWK hospital, were taken.

LeBlanc says some informatio­n might also have been stolen from former public service and health authority employees. He said the informatio­n was shared through the MOVEit file transfer service, which the province uses to transfer employee payroll informatio­n.

“The investigat­ion remains underway so there is the potential for this number to go up or to go down,” the minister said. “I know this is an alarming situation, but rest assured we are working hard to solve this quickly and efficientl­y.”

LeBlanc said the province is working to contact those affected and will be offering them a free credit monitoring service.” But when we are talking 100,000 Nova Scotians, that’s going to be a challenge,” added LeBlanc, who pointed out some people’s contact informatio­n might have changed over the years. He also urged current and former employees to look for suspicious transactio­ns and to contact their banks.

The department’s deputy minister, Natasha Clarke, said that at this point there is no indication that any of the informatio­n compromise­d came from members of the public who were not provincial employees.

MOVEit software is made by Massachuse­tts-based company Ipswitch and allows organizati­ons to transfer files and data among employees, department­s and customers. Parent company Progress Software confirmed a vulnerabil­ity in its software last week, saying the issue could lead to potential unauthoriz­ed access of users’ systems and files.

The Nova Scotia government has said it was first informed of a critical vulnerabil­ity within its system on Thursday. The province took the service off-line and installed a security update before bringing it back online Friday, only to be told further investigat­ion was needed.

Cybersecur­ity experts were then called in on Saturday evening.

Clarke confirmed the investigat­ion indicates that the data were stolen two days before the Nova Scotia government learned of the vulnerabil­ity. “So once we put the patching in place there was no more nefarious activity that we were able to see,” she said.

Microsoft Threat Intelligen­ce has said in a tweet that the Lace Tempest hacking group, which is known for running the Clop extortion site, exploited that vulnerabil­ity.

LeBlanc would not confirm who had hacked into Nova Scotia’s system, adding that “I am not going to comment on interactio­ns with criminals.” But Clarke said the government “at this point in time” is not negotiatin­g with the hackers.

“Now the focus is understand­ing the impact of the data that has been stolen, and we have not been asked for any ransom,” she said.

The deputy minister said the government has been working with its internal security team as well as with outside experts, including an unnamed large private firm that the province has on retainer. Clarke said Nova Scotia is also working with the Canadian Centre for Cyber Security.

In an email, MOVEit said it disabled web access to protect customers and developed the security patch and gave it to customers within 48 hours of discoverin­g the vulnerabil­ity.

“We are continuing to work with industry-leading cybersecur­ity experts to investigat­e the issue and ensure we take all appropriat­e response measures,” the company said. “We have engaged with federal law enforcemen­t and other agencies with respect to the vulnerabil­ity.”

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