Today: 1 June 2025
26 June 2023
1 min read

University of Manchester confirms data breach 

The attackers claimed to have stolen 7 TB of confidential data belonging to students and faculty in emails sent to students…reports Asian Lite News

UK-based the University of Manchester has confirmed that attackers behind a cyberattack revealed in early June had stolen data that is related to some students and alumni.

“Based on our investigations, we believe that a small proportion of data has been copied that relates to some students, and some alumni. We have written directly to those individuals who may have been affected by this,” the university said.

“We understand that this will create concern for some, but we would like to assure our community that our internal and external experts are working around the clock to continue to address this and our investigations are continuing,” it added.

According to BleepingComputer, the university first revealed the attack on June 9, warning that data had been stolen but claiming that it had nothing to do with the MOVEit Transfer data theft attacks.

As reported earlier, the attackers claimed to have stolen 7 TB of confidential data belonging to students and faculty in emails sent to students.

“We would like to inform all students, lecturers, administration, and staff that we have successfully hacked manchester.ac.uk network on June 6, 2023,” the threat actors said in the email.

“We have stolen 7TB of data, including confidential personal information from students and staff, research data, medical data, police reports, drug test results, databases, HR documents, finance documents, and more.”

According to an update to the cyberattack information page, the attackers gained access to a variety of sensitive data, including — names and contact details, university ID numbers, dates of birth and gender, nationality, domicile, and ethnicity, among others.

As part of the investigation, the university said it is working with the Information Commissioner’s Office, the National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC), the National Crime Agency, and other regulatory agencies.

ALSO READ-AWS bets big on generative AI solutions

Previous Story

India to produce F414 engines for Tejas 

Next Story

Arijit Singh gives romantic spin to ‘Pasoori Nu’

Latest from Tech Lite

Accel Puts India’s AI Power in the Spotlight

Under the theme “Engineering India’s AI Advantage,” the exclusive, invite-only event will bring together leading AI founders, researchers, tech CXOs, policymakers, and global investors….reports Asian Lite News Global venture capital firm Accel

Tech giants unite for Stargate UAE

This marks the beginning of a strategic partnership involving G42, OpenAI, Oracle, NVIDIA, Cisco, and SoftBank Group, all coming together under the banner of international AI leadership. In a landmark announcement that

Universities Embrace AI Future

Echoing this sentiment, Professor Esameldin Agamy, Chancellor of UoS, emphasised the value of academic partnerships in nurturing innovation across the UAE’s education sector The American University of Sharjah (AUS) hosted the concluding

AI Meets Ghibli: Copyright Debate Sparks Controversy

The digital art and retouching technology has helped movies reach a greater audience during the marketing leg of films. Standees, posters, flyers, billboards (creative and interactive billboards included), that little digital album
Go toTop

Don't Miss

‘Open societies vulnerable to cyberattacks’

PM Modi called for the reform of the multilateral system

Israel detects a rise in cyberattack attempts against hospitals

The Israeli Ministry of Health has detected an abnormal increase