The LockBit Ransomware Takes Responsibility for the Royal Mail Cyberattack

 

The LockBit ransomware operation has asserted responsibility for the cyberattack on Royal Mail, the UK’s leading mail delivery service, which forced the company to stop its international shipping services due to “severe service disruption.” 
This emerges after LockBitSupport, the public-facing representative of the ransomware group, earlier told BleepingComputer that the LockBit cybercrime group did not target Royal Mail. They instead blamed the attack on other threat actors who used the LockBit 3.0 ransomware builder, which was leaked on Twitter in September 2022. LockBitSupp did not clarify why printed Royal Mail ransom notes seen by BleepingComputer included links to LockBit’s Tor negotiation and data leak sites rather than those operated by a different threat actor.
However, LockBitSupp validated LockBit’s involvement in the attack in a post on a Russian-language hacking forum after discovering that one of their affiliates deployed the gang’s ransomware payloads on Royal Mail’s systems.
The representative of the ransomware gang also stated that they would only provide a decryptor and delete data stolen from Royal Mail’s network after a ransom was paid. The entry for the Royal Mail attack on LockBit’s data leak site currently states that stolen data will be published online on Thursday, February 9, at 03:42 AM UTC.
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