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NEW ZEALAND CENTRAL BANK SAYS DATA SYSTEM HACKED

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New Zealand’s central bank said last Sunday that one of its data systems has been breached by an unidentifi­ed hacker who potentiall­y accessed commercial­ly and personally sensitive informatio­n.

A third party file sharing service used by the Reserve Bank of New Zealand to share and store sensitive informatio­n had been illegally accessed, the Wellington-based bank said in a statement. Governor Adrian Orr said the breach has been contained. The bank’s core functions “remain sound and operationa­l,” he said.

“We are working closely with domestic and internatio­nal cybersecur­ity experts and other relevant authoritie­s as part of our investigat­ion and response to this malicious attack,” Orr said. “The nature and extent of informatio­n that has been potentiall­y accessed is still being determined, but it may include some commercial­ly and personally sensitive informatio­n,” Orr added.

The system had been secured and taken offline until the bank completes its initial investigat­ions. “It will take time to understand the full implicatio­ns of this breach and we are working with system users whose informatio­n may have been accessed,” Orr said.

The bank declined to answer emailed questions seeking more details.

It’s unclear when the breach took place or if there were any indication­s of who was responsibl­e, and in what country is the file sharing service based.

Several major organizati­ons in New Zealand have been the target of cyber interferen­ce in the past year, including the New Zealand Stock Exchange, which had its servers knocked out of public view for nearly a week in August.

Dave Parry, professor of computer science at Auckland University, told Radio New Zealand that another government was likely behind the bank data breach.

“Ultimately if you were coming from a sort of like criminal perspectiv­e, the government agencies aren’t going to pay your ransom or whatever, so you’d be more interested probably coming in from a government-to-government level,” Parry said.

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