Nursery hackers threaten to publish more children’s profiles

Joe TidyCyber Reporter, BBC World Service
Getty ImagesThousands of nursery children and their families who hold their pictures and special data for the ransom, the computer pirates, unless paid online will publish more information, he says.
They published the profile of 10 online children on Thursday, calling the Kido nursery chain, which was hacked.
“The next steps for us, each child and 100 employees will be to publish 30 more ‘profile’ of each child and 100 employees.
Kido did not respond to BBC’s comments. However, he works with the authorities and investigates the met police.
Kido, parents, criminals, a software service called Famly, said the violation took place when the data contained.
The software is widely used by other nursery and child care organizations and says it is used by more than one million “managers, practitioners and families” on its website.
There is no indication that other Family customers are affected. BBC News contacted the company for a comment.
The site of the criminals contains a gallery of 10 children with nursery pictures, date of birth, birthplace and details – with whom they live and contact information.
Parents contacted the BBC about the BBC, who received a telephone conversation from a mother criminals.
The woman who does not want to take names, Hackers, to pay a ransom to pay the information of Kido’s information online will publish a phone that says that he will publish a phone.
The mother described the call as “threatening”.
Stephen Gilbert, another parent, said that someone in the WhatsApp group of his parents received a call to the TODAY program in the BBC Radio 4.
“Revelation that the details of the children may have been placed in the dark network, this is very worrying and worrying for me.”

However, Sean, who had a child in Kido Nursery in Tooting, contacted the BBC News to tell the staff there.
“Now we’re in the digital age where everything is online, and I think you know that it has a risk that it might happen at some point,” he said.
“Any parent should probably direct their anger to the filth that actually makes.
“You just see people who run your nursery, and it’s all great. And these poor people are the people who hold it on the front.”
‘We are doing this for money’
It is known that cyber criminals call for victim organizations to put pressure on ransom payment.
However, looking for individual victims is extremely rare.
In the speeches made with a messaging application signal, fluent English -speaking criminals claimed that BBC English is not the first language and that they hired people to call.
This is a sign of the emotion of criminals, but also a sign of helplessness as it is understood that Kido does not fit.
Police advice is never to pay pirate ransom because it encourages the crime ecosystem.
Computer pirates first contacted the BBC about their violations on Monday.
After publishing the first bathroom of the children, the BBC asked if he was guilty of his sad actions, and the criminals said: “Not for money, not for money.”
“I know we’re guilty,” they said.
“This is not for the first time and I will not have the last time.”
But they also said that they would not target preschool again because attention was very big.
Since then they have deleted their signal accounts and no longer contacted.






