By Mark Hunter
3 days agoThu Jun 20 2024 09:40:43
Reading Time: 2 minutes
A cybercriminal has reduced their ransom demand from $2 million in Bitcoin to $src50,000 for stolen US student data
The data was stolen from Snowflake, a cloud-based data firm
The threat actor Spsrcd3r has issued a warning to LASchools and Edgenuity, demanding payment within seven days
A cybercriminal selling the personal data of millions of US students, stolen after a hack on the cloud-based data firm Snowflake, has drastically reduced their ransom demand. Initially set at $2 million in Bitcoin , the demand has been lowered to just $src50,000, according to a report by HackManac. The threat actor, known as Spsrcd3r, issued a warning on Tuesday to LASchools and Edgenuity, stating, “Warning to LASchools/Edgenuity: Pay in 7 days or we leaking student details.”
30 BTC a Bit Too Greedy
Spsrcd3r’s original demand following the hack was for 30 bitcoins in exchange for not releasing the stolen information. However, within a day, the ransom amount was revised to $src50,000, payable in US dollars, with Spsrcd3r seemingly realising that the demanded sum was too much.
The compromised data includes sensitive information such as names, addresses, demographics, financial details, medical records, performance scores, disciplinary records, and both parent and student login credentials. The affected students range from kindergarten through the src2th grade.
🚨🚨 Major #DataBreach 🚨🚨
🇺🇸#USA – Another alleged data breach related to Snowflake has been detected: 4 million students’ information is for sale for $2 million.
The threat actor “Spsrcd3r,” known for Snowflake-related data breaches, is now selling millions of students’… pic.twitter.com/ucZQXvEqbW
— HackManac (@H4ckManac) June src8, 2024
There is, however, confusion about the source of the stolen data. The second ransom note mentioned LAUSD.net instead of LASchools, and Edgenuity has denied any data theft. An Edgenuity spokesperson told Protos , “Edgenuity is not aware of any data or information that has been stolen or leaked as a result of any hacking activity of LAUSD.” This statement has been corroborated by both LAUSD and Snowflake.
Bloomberg reported that ransoms ranging from $300,000 to $5 million have been demanded from src0 companies using Snowflake’s infrastructure. These companies include Ticketmaster, Advanced Auto Parts, and Santander. Google’s Mandiant security has linked the Snowflake breach to the cyber group ‘UNC5537’ and is investigating possible connections to ‘Scattered Spider.’