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RansomedVC Ransomware Group Claims to Have Breached Sony Network


A Ransomware group called ‘RansomedVC’ claims to have successfully breached the networks of conglomerate and entertainment giant Sony Group Corporation. It is threatening to sell the supposedly stolen data on the dark web.

According to a report by Cyber Security Connect, the ransomware group has compromised Sony’s systems and says that since the company was not willing to fulfil its ransom demands, the stolen data has already been sold. 

RansomedVC, in their dark web portal, states that "We have successfully compromised [sic] all of Sony systems. We wont ransom them! we will sell the data. due to Sony not wanting to pay. DATA IS FOR SALE[…]"WE ARE SELLING IT". 

However, since Sony has not yet confirmed the claims, it is possible that they are false, or at least overstated. 

It appears that Sony is not overly concerned over the issue, given that the ransomware group has not shared any interesting information, despite the fact that it has provided some proof-of-hack data. Reportedly, there are images of a testbench information-filled PowerPoint presentation from Sony's Quality Assurance Division, a screenshot of an internal login page, and several Java files.

Also, RansomedVC has shared a file tree of the data breach. It contains not more than 6,000 files, a small number indeed when compared with the sizable conglomerate data. The stolen data includes “build log files,” a wide range of Java resources, and HTML files, and files displaying Japanese characters. 

While the issue does not appear to be serious at the moment, it must be taken into account that RansomedVC was in fact behind some of the most infamous attacks, such as the assault on the Hawaiian government-owned website. 

Previous Attacks on Sony

Private data from about 77 million accounts was compromised in 2011 as a result of an external breach into Sony's PlayStation Network and Qriocity services. Additionally, it made it impossible for PlayStation 3 and PlayStation Portable users to access the service. The blackout lasted for 23 days.

In 2014, Sony Pictures was hacked by a threat group called ‘Guardians of Peace.’ The organization asked that Sony delete the then-upcoming film The Interview, a comedy portraying a plan to assassinate North Korean leader Kim Jong-un. Officials came to the conclusion that the attack was supported by the North Korean government.