BREAK NEWS CONCERN AS TTCL DATA REPORTEDLY STOLEN BY HACKERS
Dar es Salaam. Tanzania Telecommunications Company Limited (TTCL) yesterday denied reports that its website had been attacked by a group of international hackers known as Anonymous and data stolen.
ICT website Softpedia reported on Monday
that the hackers had accessed and dumped on the web particulars of
thousands of TTCL employees, including real names, email addresses,
telephone numbers, their departments and job titles.
“The
data seems to have been stolen from the company’s website because other
than employee details, the hackers also dumped data for users that had
an account on the site, information that included usernames and
passwords,” says the Softpedia report.
However, TTCL
Public Relations Manager Nicodemus Mushi told The Citizen yesterday that
they had not traced any breach of their systems and had not seen any
leaked files online.
“We learnt of the hacking claims
on Monday night and our technicians immediately probed the matter, but
as we are speaking now, we have not detected any signs of an attack.
We’re sure that all our files are safe and secure,” Mr Mushi said in a
telephone interview.
He also clarified that TTCL had
only 1,557 workers across the country and not the tens of thousands
whose details had reportedly been stolen. The reports suggested that up
to 64,000 people had their details obtained from the TTCL website.
Had
their website been hacked, Mr Mushi said, they would have experienced
troubles in operating it and would also have seen the leaked documents
dumped online, but neither had happened.
“Our systems
are secure. As far as the telecoms sector is concerned, we have the best
minds in the country and they are a step ahead of local and
international hackers.”
But Anonymous are currently one of the world’s most powerful and elusive “hacktivists”
In
a successful hacking operation late last year, codenamed #OpParis
following the terror attacks in Paris, they managed to take down more
than 20,000 Twitter accounts affiliated to the Islamic State (IS)
militant group or its sympathizers.
Late last month,
they launched #OpAfrica campaign, and, according a press release seen
online by The Citizen, they said “the focus of the operation is a
disassembly of corporations and governments that enable and perpetuate
corruption on the African continent”.
These include organisations linked with child abuse/labour as well as internet censorship within the continent and globally.
“We
are fighting alongside other operations such as #OpNigeria and
#AnonymousSA to help free the continent from the plague of exploitation
that has been occurring for centuries,” they said.
The
hackers went on to issue what they called the “first target list”, which
includes the governments of Tanzania, Rwanda, Uganda, South African,
Zimbabwe, Ethiopia, Sudan and South Sudan.
Prior to the
alleged TTCL hacking, the group was reported to have launched a cyber
attack on Broadband Systems Corporation, a Rwandan IT firm that provides
high-quality video conferencing software for the Rwandan government.
Hackers
gained access to the company’s email accounts, along with its ticketing
system, from where they dumped the database’s content that contained
details such as employees’ names, email addresses, hashed passwords and
phone numbers.
Uganda’s Ministry of Finance has also
reportedly been attacked, with the hackers said to have breached the
ministry’s database and dumped online the details of 220 government
employees, including their real names, emails, phone numbers, usernames
and passwords.
However, there is already resentment
over #OpAfrica, with Softpedia reporting that many have argued that the
group “is not actually helping since it is not doing anything except
hack government agencies and state-owned companies that have weak
security measures and then dump data of innocent people online, exposing
them to various types of dangers”
Former government
ICT coordinator August Kowero told The Citizen that while the security
implications of the systems of a corporation like TTCL being hacked were
serious, it was not an easy thing to do even by international hackers.
“I
don’t see TTCL being particularly prone to cyber attacks. They are
using fixed networks...you can’t breach their systems, unless you cut
the cables manually. Almost all government data is stored this way for
protection,” he said.
Mr Kowero, who is now a
consultant, said advances in technology and availability of high quality
anti-hacking software means that corporations such as TTCL are well
protected against online threats.”
0 comments:
Post a Comment