Dublin tram system site down after hacker demands one bitcoin in ransom
But the current bitcoin price is just over £3,000
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Your support makes all the difference.The website for Dublin’s tram system Luas has been hacked, with the perpetrators demanding one bitcoin in ransom.
Those who visited luas.ie earlier today were met with a threatening message left by the hackers demanding one bitcoin, currently worth £3,055.
“You are hacked,” it read. “Some time ago I wrote that you have serious security holes.
“You didn’t reply.
“The next time someone talks to you, press the reply button.
“You must pay one bitcoin in five days.
“Otherwise I will publish all data and send emails to your users.”
It then listed an address to send the bitcoin. The message has since been removed by Luas.
The company tweeted: “The Luas website was compromised this morning, and a malicious message was put on the home page. The website has been taken down by the IT company who manage it, and their technicians are working on it.
“Luas are informed this may take the day to resolve.”
Twitter user Gavan Reilly pointed out that with the current bitcoin price hovering just north of £3,000, the hacker was “a very conscientious soul”.
Luas has promised to update customers via Twitter and Facebook, AA Road Watch and the media should there be any change to scheduled services.
Passengers can also contact Luas Customer on 1850 300 604 and info@luas.ie.
“We apologies [sic] to all Luas customers for the inconvenience,” it added on Twitter.
The incident is believed to be a ransomware attack, where hackers use a type of malicious software that threatens to publish the victim’s data or block access to it unless a ransom is paid.
Luas carried 37.6 million people in 2017 and transports 100,000 passengers on average daily.
It’s not the first time a travel company has fallen victim to an attack. In November 2018, the records of 500 million of hotel group Marriott’s customers were involved in a data breach.
The hotel chain’s Starwood division guest reservation database was compromised by an unauthorised party.
Customer data included names, addresses, phone numbers, email addresses, passport numbers, account information, dates of birth, gender and arrival and departure information.
In addition, Marriott said some records included encrypted payment card information – and the possibility that the encryption keys had also been stolen could not be ruled out.
“We deeply regret this incident happened,” the company said in a statement at the time.
“Marriott reported this incident to law enforcement and continues to support their investigation. The company has already begun notifying regulatory authorities.”
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