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FIR Filed After Noida Logistics Company Claims User Data Leaked

 

High-profile clients' private information, including that of top government officials, was leaked due to a significant cybersecurity incident at Agarwal Packers and Movers Ltd (APML) in India. Concerns over the security of corporate data as well as possible national security implications have been raised by the June 1 incident. An inquiry is still under progress after police filed a formal complaint. 

In what could be one of the most sensitive data breaches in recent memory, Agarwal Packers and Movers Ltd (APML), a well-known logistics company with its headquarters located in Sector 60, Noida, has disclosed that private client information, including the addresses and phone numbers of senior government clients, has been stolen. 

The intrusion was detected on June 1 after several clients, including prominent bureaucrats, diplomats, and military people, began receiving suspicious, highly targeted phone calls.

"The nature of the calls strongly indicated that the callers had access to specific customer queries and records related to upcoming relocations," the complainant, Jaswinder Singh Ahluwalia, Group President and CEO of APML, stated in the police FIR. He cautioned that this is more than just a disclosure of company data. It has an impact on personal privacy, public trust, and possibly national security. 

The company initiated an internal technical inspection, which uncovered traces of unauthorised cyber infiltration, confirming worries regarding a breach. The audit detected collaboration between internal personnel and external cybercriminals. While the scope of the hack is still being investigated, its significance is undeniable: the firm serves India's elite, making the stolen data a potential goldmine for bad actors. 

In accordance with Sections 318(4) and 319(2) of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita and Sections 66C (identity theft) and 66D (impersonation by computer resource) of the Information Technology Act, a formal complaint was filed at the Sector 36 Cyber Crime Police Station. 

According to Cyber SHO Ranjeet Singh, they have a detailed complaint with technological proof to back it up. At the moment, their cyber unit is looking through access trails, firewall activity, and internal server records. Due to the nature of clients impacted, the issue is being handled with the highest attention. 

The attack has triggered calls for stricter cybersecurity practices in private companies that serve sensitive sectors. While APML has yet to reveal how many people were affected, its internal records allegedly include relocation information for high-level clientele like as judges, intelligence officers, and foreign dignitaries.

British supermarkets' Supplier of Refrigerated Goods Hit by a Ransomware Attack

 

Peter Green Chilled, a logistics firm, has announced that it has been attacked by a ransomware attack, interrupting deliveries of refrigerated goods to some of the country's top supermarkets.

Customers — largely smaller producers who provide food to regional stores in Somerset, such as Aldi, Tesco, and Sainsbury's — received an email last Thursday informing them that the company will be unable to complete part of their orders owing to the cyber incident.

Peter Green Chilled told the BBC that the attack occurred last Wednesday and had no effect on the company's transport business, but he declined to elaborate on how the incident affected the IT infrastructure via which orders are placed. 

A substantial part of the nation's frozen food is transported by Reed Boardall, a cold storage and refrigerated transport company that was attacked a number of years ago. Some of its customers have warned that they would be spoilt if they couldn't get their products delivered to retailers in time, despite the fact that Peter Green Chilled is a far smaller supplier than Reed Boardall.

After incidents involving Marks & Spencer, the Co-op, and the upscale London retailer Harrods, this attack is the most recent to affect the British retail industry. A string of recent attacks, including one revealed last week that could expose the personal information of domestic violence victims to their abusers, has prompted renewed calls for the British government to adopt a more active response to the ransomware threat. 

Law enforcement agencies should hack the criminals' systems and take them down as the "ideal response" to ransomware gangs' attempts at data extortion, in which the gangs steal data and threaten to release it unless a certain amount of money is paid in cryptocurrency, according to Gareth Mott, a research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute think tank.

It was not an easy task, Mott said. Even though the National Crime Agency and its allies had been successful in combating ransomware organisations such as LockBit, Mott stated that he was unsure if they currently have the ability to eliminate the most risky data breaches on a selective basis.