NRA Reacts to Allegations of a Ransomware Campaign

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CySecurity News – Latest Information Security and Hacking Incidents

 

Last year, the National Rifle Association — champion of gun-toting maniacs worldwide, admitted it was hacked by cybercriminals. The organization’s political action committee (PAC) confirmed the attack in a filing to the Federal Election Commission on Friday. 
Last October, a ransomware group known as “Grief” boasted to the digital underworld about hacking into the gun lobby’s networks and stealing critical internal papers. It released screenshots of documents it claimed to be stolen during the event. The NRA did not confirm or deny it had been hacked at the time. 
“The National Rifle Association does not talk about its physical or electronic security. The NRA, on the other hand, takes exceptional precautions to safeguard information about its members, funders, and operations, and is extremely cautious in doing so.” Andrew Arulanandam, managing director of NRA Public Affairs. 
The NRA was added as a new victim on the ransomware gang’s data site today, along with pictures of Excel spreadsheets revealing US tax information and transaction amounts. The threat actors also published a 2.7 MB archive called ‘National Grants.zip,’ which comprises bogus NRA grant applications. After Grief claimed it obtained 13 files supposedly from the NRA’s databases, security researchers began posting about

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