
M&S hackers sent abuse and ransom demand directly to chief executive
The Marks & Spencer hackers reportedly sent an abusive email to the retailer's boss, gloating about the hack and demanding ransom payment.
M&S CEO Stuart Machin was sent an email on 23 April from a hacker group called DragonForce, using the email account of an employee, which confirms that the British high street retailer was targeted by a ransomware group, something they have refused to acknowledge.
The email, seen and reported on by the BBC, says: 'We have marched the ways from China all the way to the UK and have mercilessly raped your company and encrypted all the servers
"The dragon wants to speak to you so please head over to [our darknet website]."
A darknet link shared in the email connected to a portal for DragonForce victims to negotiate a ransom fee. The criminal organisation said: 'let's get the party started. Message us, we will make this fast and easy for us.'
They ended the email with an image of a dragon breathing fire, according to the BBC.
The blackmail message reportedly included a racist term and was sent to Mr Machin and several other executives.
As well as bragging about installing ransomware across the M&S IT system to render it useless, the hackers said they have stolen the private data of millions of customers.
Three weeks later, M&S informed their customers that their data may have been stolen. The email was apparently sent using the account of an employee from IT company Tata Consultancy Services (TCS), which has provided IT services to M&S for over a decade.
The IT worker had an M&S email address, but is a paid TCS employee. It is believed that he himself was hacked in the attack. The IT company has previously said it is investigating whether it was a gateway for the cyberattack and since told the BBC the email was not sent from its system and has nothing to do with the breach.
M&S told The Independent: 'We cannot comment on details of or speculation on the cyber incident, and we have been advised not to.'
DragonForce is the second hacking group to be linked to the M&S cyberattack; the Scattered Spider network, a group of young hackers across the UK and US, was also connected to the incident.
Marks & Spencer has predicted that the cyberattack will disrupt its operations into July and will take an estimated £300 million hit to profits this year.
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