logo
Russia says Aeroflot has recovered from cyberattack, but dozens more flights cancelled

Russia says Aeroflot has recovered from cyberattack, but dozens more flights cancelled

CNA2 days ago
Russian airline Aeroflot cancelled dozens more flights on Tuesday but said it had now stabilised its schedule after a major cyberattack a day earlier, and the transport ministry said the issue had been resolved.
Two pro-Ukraine hacking groups claimed on Monday to have carried out a year-long operation to penetrate Aeroflot's network. They said they had crippled 7,000 servers, extracted data on passengers and employees and gained control over the personal computers of staff, including senior managers.
Aeroflot's online timetable showed about 25 flights out of Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport had been cancelled on Tuesday, mostly overnight and through the morning. Nearly all afternoon and evening flights were due to take off, though dozens were delayed.
Interfax news agency said 31 inbound flights to the capital had been cancelled.
Aeroflot said it had "stabilised" its flight programme. The transport ministry said in a statement: "Thanks to the efforts of Aeroflot employees, with the active support of Sheremetyevo services, the problem that arose was resolved in the shortest possible time."
The ministry described the issue as "a failure in the IT infrastructure". It did not refer to it as a cyberattack, although prosecutors have said they are investigating it as such.
Responsibility was claimed by the Belarusian Cyber Partisans, a long-established group that opposes President Alexander Lukashenko, and by a more shadowy and recent hacking outfit that calls itself Silent Crow.
'SAVING FACE'
Yuliana Shemetovets, a spokesperson for the Cyber Partisans, said Aeroflot was likely working with costly manual systems in order to maintain the appearance of business as usual. The ministry statement said there had been a "transition to domestic systems".
"Without IT systems the company can work manually like in the old days when flight tickets cost more than $1K," Shemetovets told Reuters. "It would just be unprofitable, meaning the company would keep sustaining losses just to save face."
She said that Aeroflot's CEO had not changed his password since 2022 and that the company was using an outdated version of Windows software. Some workers had passwords saved in a Word document on their computers, she added.
Reuters could not independently confirm those details and has approached Aeroflot for comment.
Aeroflot's shares were up 1.36 per cent on Tuesday, recovering some ground after slumping to their lowest mark since late 2024 on Monday.
Russian lawmakers said the cyberattack was a wake-up call and that investigators should focus not only on the perpetrators but on those who had allowed it to happen.
Mikhail Klimarev, director of the Internet Protection Society, a Russian digital rights group, said it was a serious episode that showed cybercriminals were learning "best practice" from around the world while Russian companies were hampered in their response because of sanctions.
"It's like with viruses: If you don't communicate with people who have the flu, you have no immunity," he told Reuters.
Klimarev said Russian security services had dropped the ball, and the incident highlighted a failure of the technical systems that are meant to allow them to counter such threats.
He said there was a grave safety risk as the hackers could hypothetically have exploited their access to Aeroflot systems in order to change data and cause planes to crash.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Explainer-What is the significance of Russia's claimed capture of Ukrainian town Chasiv Yar?
Explainer-What is the significance of Russia's claimed capture of Ukrainian town Chasiv Yar?

Straits Times

time22 minutes ago

  • Straits Times

Explainer-What is the significance of Russia's claimed capture of Ukrainian town Chasiv Yar?

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox A serviceman of 24th Mechanized brigade named after King Danylo of the Ukrainian Armed Forces fires a 2s5 \"Hyacinth-s\" self-propelled howitzer towards Russian troops at a front line, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, near the town of Chasiv Yar in Donetsk region, Ukraine November 18, 2024. Oleg Petrasiuk/Press Service of the 24th King Danylo Separate Mechanized Brigade of the Ukrainian Armed Forces/Handout via REUTERS/File Photo MOSCOW - Russia said on Thursday it had taken full control of the shattered town of Chasiv Yar in eastern Ukraine after nearly 16 months of fighting, an assertion which Kyiv dismissed as "propaganda". Following are key facts about Chasiv Yar, which Russians call Chasov Yar, and the long battle for its control which began in March/April 2024. WHAT IS CHASIV YAR? With a pre-war population of more than 12,000, Chasiv Yar (Quiet Ravine) sits in the industrial Donbas area in Ukraine's Donetsk region, one of four regions that Moscow claimed to have annexed in 2022, something Kyiv called an illegal land grab. Dissected by a canal, the town's pre-war economy centred on a factory that produced reinforced concrete products and clay used in bricks. Located on higher ground, it once served as a regrouping point and as a forward artillery base for the Ukrainian army. It was regarded by the Russian military as one of Ukraine's best defended strongholds due to its geography, elevated position, terrain and factories and apartment blocks where Ukrainian forces were able to dig in. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore 'For one last time, let's go home': Tears, laughs as last scheduled Jetstar Asia flight touches down Singapore Over half of job applications by retrenched Jetstar Asia staff led to offers or interviews: CEO Singapore No entry: ICA to bar high-risk, undesirable travellers from boarding S'pore-bound ships, flights Singapore 5 foreign women suspected of trafficking 27kg of cocaine nabbed in Changi Airport Singapore Fallen tree branch damages two Yishun flats, showering one home owner in shattered glass Singapore Man accused of raping woman who hired him to fix lights in her flat claims she made first move Singapore Jail for ex-employee of agency under MOH who corruptly obtained $18k trip from 2 men Singapore 'Switching careers just as I became a dad was risky, but I had to do it for my family' WHY DOES RUSSIA WANT IT? Russia's capture of the town, if confirmed, would advance Moscow's grinding effort to encircle the "fortress city" of Kostiantynivka which it is trying to envelop in a pincer movement, and remove what had become an obstacle to its army's advance westwards across the rest of Donetsk. Russian military analysts list Sloviansk, Kramatorsk, Druzhkivka and Kostiantynivka as the "fortress cities" in Ukraine's east accessible from Chasiv Yar if Moscow's forces can get there, something Kyiv is determined to stop. Russian analysts say their military will use Chasiv Yar as a base to target Ukrainian forces in northern Donetsk with artillery and drone fire and to try to hamper Ukrainian supply lines in the area. But holding ground and advancing northwards will not be easy, war blogger Rybar said. WHAT HAS THE BATTLE FOR CHASIV YAR BEEN LIKE? Military analysts on both sides say the battle has been one of the longest of the war and one of the most grinding engagements with high but undisclosed casualties on both sides. Russia's Defence Ministry said on Thursday its paratroopers had covered more than 20 km (12 miles) under Ukrainian artillery and drone fire in their push to take the town and had cleared more than 4,200 buildings and structures. Reuters could not confirm that assertion. Ukraine says its fierce and prolonged resistance in Chasiv Yar shows how it has been able to slow and inflict heavy casualties on a numerically-superior force, including with the help of its drone units. HOW IMPORTANT WOULD ITS FALL BE? Ukrainian analysts have downplayed Chasiv Yar's importance and suggested Russia taking it would be a Pyrrhic victory given the high price Kyiv has forced Moscow to pay for the town and how long it has been able to hold off Russian forces. Some Russian analysts say that the town's capture would be a tactical victory rather than a strategic one. Sergei Markov, a former Kremlin adviser, said the battle had gone on for so long that Chasiv Yar had lost its strategic importance. "But the capture of the city has symbolic significance: this is how the war could continue for many years to come - slowly, slowly, the Russian army will advance," Markov wrote on Telegram. WHAT DOES CHASIV YAR LOOK LIKE NOW? Most of the town lies in ruins and pulverised after extensive shelling, air strikes and glide bomb and drone attacks by Russian forces. Ukraine says a Russian strike on residential buildings in the town in 2022 killed at least 43 people. Russia says those killed were Ukrainian troops. The mayor of the town left long ago and most of its inhabitants were evacuated as its utilities - power, gas and water - were destroyed. Only 304 residents remained in the area as of November last year, sheltering in basements, according to Serhii Chaus, the head of the town's Ukrainian military administration. The Russian military said on Thursday that its forces had evacuated 65 civilians. REUTERS

Putin signs law penalising online searches for ‘extremist' content with $81 fine
Putin signs law penalising online searches for ‘extremist' content with $81 fine

Straits Times

time22 minutes ago

  • Straits Times

Putin signs law penalising online searches for ‘extremist' content with $81 fine

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox The new law in Russia also penalises online searches for feminist rock bank Pussy Riot. – Russian President Vladimir Putin on July 31 put his signature to a law that fines internet users who search for web pages, books, artwork or music albums that the authorities deem 'extremist'. The law, slammed by critics as another dangerous attack on freedom of thought and expression in Russia, introduces fines of up to 5,000 rubles (S$81) on anyone found to have deliberately searched for, or gained access to, material listed as 'extremist materials'. More than 5,000 entries are on the official list, including songs praising Ukraine, blog posts by feminist rock band Pussy Riot and websites critical of Mr Putin. Lawmakers in the State Duma backed the Bill earlier in July despite rare opposition from two parliamentary groups. Russian opposition politician Boris Nadezhdin, who organised a protest against the Bill, said it was like 'something out of 1984', a reference to George Orwell's novel about a totalitarian superstate. 'This law punishes thought crimes,' he said. The law also bans advertising for virtual private networks (VPNs) and imposes fines for transferring SIM cards to another person, both ways of browsing with more privacy. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore 'For one last time, let's go home': Tears, laughs as last scheduled Jetstar Asia flight touches down Singapore Over half of job applications by retrenched Jetstar Asia staff led to offers or interviews: CEO Singapore No entry: ICA to bar high-risk, undesirable travellers from boarding S'pore-bound ships, flights Singapore 5 foreign women suspected of trafficking 27kg of cocaine nabbed in Changi Airport Singapore Fallen tree branch damages two Yishun flats, showering one home owner in shattered glass Singapore Man accused of raping woman who hired him to fix lights in her flat claims she made first move Singapore Jail for ex-employee of agency under MOH who corruptly obtained $18k trip from 2 men Singapore 'Switching careers just as I became a dad was risky, but I had to do it for my family' Many Russian users continue to access websites banned by the state via VPN services that allow them to get around state blocks. Russia has drastically restricted press freedom and freedom of speech online since launching its offensive in Ukraine in 2022 . It has blocked access to dozens of Western sites, including Facebook and Instagram. AFP

Irish court rejects McGregor appeal in sexual assault case
Irish court rejects McGregor appeal in sexual assault case

Straits Times

time22 minutes ago

  • Straits Times

Irish court rejects McGregor appeal in sexual assault case

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox FILE PHOTO: Irish mixed martial arts fighter Conor McGregor arrives at court, on the day he attends a civil trial on allegations of sexual assault, in Dublin, Ireland November 19, 2024. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne/File Photo DUBLIN - Martial arts fighter Conor McGregor on Thursday lost his attempt to overturn a jury's order that he compensate a woman who accused him of raping her, with Ireland's Court of Appeal rejecting the appeal in its entirety. The plaintiff, Nikita Hand, alleged that McGregor sexually assaulted her on December 9, 2018. A jury last November ordered McGregor to pay her nearly 250,000 euros ($285,250) in damages. McGregor, 36, denied the allegation and said he had "fully consensual sex" with Hand. He also denied causing bruising to the plaintiff. In the appeal heard earlier this month, lawyers for McGregor said the judge erred in directing the jury to decide whether he "assaulted" rather than "sexually assaulted" the victim. Judge Brian O'Moore said on Thursday that the appeal court had no doubt the overall effect of the trial judge's charge was to tell them the central allegation by Hand against McGregor was that he had raped her. McGregor's legal team had also argued that the judge should not have allowed a line of questioning during cross-examination regarding McGregor's "no comment" responses in a police interview. That ground was also rejected. Hand embraced a number of people beside her after the appeal court ruling. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore 'For one last time, let's go home': Tears, laughs as last scheduled Jetstar Asia flight touches down Singapore Over half of job applications by retrenched Jetstar Asia staff led to offers or interviews: CEO Singapore No entry: ICA to bar high-risk, undesirable travellers from boarding S'pore-bound ships, flights Singapore 5 foreign women suspected of trafficking 27kg of cocaine nabbed in Changi Airport Singapore Fallen tree branch damages two Yishun flats, showering one home owner in shattered glass Singapore Man accused of raping woman who hired him to fix lights in her flat claims she made first move Singapore Jail for ex-employee of agency under MOH who corruptly obtained $18k trip from 2 men Singapore 'Switching careers just as I became a dad was risky, but I had to do it for my family' "To every survivor out there I know how hard it is but please don't be silenced ... You deserve to be heard, you also deserve justice. Today, I can finally move on and try to heal," Hand said in a statement outside the court. Hand told the high court in November that she and a friend made contact with McGregor, whom she knew, after a work Christmas party. She said they were driven by McGregor to a party in a penthouse room of a Dublin hotel where drugs and alcohol were consumed. She said McGregor, who was not in court on Thursday, took her to a bedroom in the penthouse and sexually assaulted her. Hand's lawyer told the jury that when she was referred to a sexual assault treatment unit the day after the alleged assault, a doctor was so concerned that he directed that photographs be taken of her injuries. REUTERS

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store