A 21-year-old man from West Dunbartonshire has been convicted of creating, selling and supporting an online computer system with the capability of bringing down websites.
Detective Chief Inspector Andy Maclean, of Police Scotland’s Cybercrime Investigations Unit, said: “Tagore supplied a tool used by his customers to carry out Distributed Denial of Services (DDOS) attacks. These are often used to attack commercial systems, taking websites offline and causing widespread disruption.
Read more…
Source: Police Scotland
Related:
- UK: Council website back online after cyber attack
November 1, 2024
Burnley Council website is back online after being disrupted by a cyber attack yesterday afternoon. Services across numerous councils in the North West, including Tameside Council and Salford City Council were targeted with a Distributed Denial of Service attack (DDoS). IT teams have now successfully restored the website, and no data has been compromised. Read more… Source: MSN ...
- London taxi drivers wrongly hit with Ulez charges after TfL cyber attack
October 13, 2024
Thousands of black cab drivers have been wrongly hit with Ulez and Congestion Charge fines after the cyber attack against London’s transport authority. The Licensed Taxi Drivers’ Association (LTDA) said it had received thousands of calls this week from panicking cabbies who had begun receiving automated penalties from Transport for London (TfL). Read more… Source: MSN News Sign up ...
- London Fire Brigade block almost 340,000 cyber attacks
October 8, 2024
The London Fire Brigade, the fire and rescue service for the UK’s capital, has been targeted by nearly 340,000 cyber-attacks over the past year. The data was collected under the Freedom of Information Act (FOI), and analysed by the Parliament Street think tank, observing the number of blocked email attacks by the department. In total, the ...
- UK’s Sellafield nuclear waste processing plant fined £333K for infosec blunders
October 4, 2024
The outfit that runs Britain’s Sellafield nuclear waste processing and decommissioning site has been fined £332,500 ($440,000) by the nation’s Office for Nuclear Regulation (ONR) for its shoddy cybersecurity practices between 2019 and 2023. Sellafield, located in Cumbria, England, manages more radioactive waste than any other nuclear site in the world, and decommissioning work happening at ...
- Northern Ireland police fined $1.29m over ‘serious’ data breach
October 3, 2024
Northern Ireland’s police authority was on Oct 3 fined £750,000 (S$1.29 million) over a data breach that saw the personal details of police and intelligence officers posted on a website. The identities of all 9,483 staff members of the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) were mistakenly published online on Aug 8, 2023, after a freedom ...
- Cyber Security Bill will prevent future attacks on NHS
October 2, 2024
New legislation to improve UK cyber defences and protect public services will prevent attacks similar to the ransomware attack impacting London hospitals, according to the Department of Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT). The Cyber Security and Resilience Bill, which is due to be introduced to Parliament in 2025, was first announced in the King’s Speech on ...