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Report Suggests Algeria's Hacking Group Targeted Moroccan Notaries Platform, Not ANCFCC
Report Suggests Algeria's Hacking Group Targeted Moroccan Notaries Platform, Not ANCFCC

Morocco World

time3 days ago

  • Politics
  • Morocco World

Report Suggests Algeria's Hacking Group Targeted Moroccan Notaries Platform, Not ANCFCC

Rabat – Hacking attacks against Moroccan institutional databases sparked debate and concern among citizens and experts, especially with the latest wave of reports that alleged a breach instigated by the Algerian group, Jabaroot DZ. Reports suggested that the Algerian group targeted Morocco's National Agency for Land Registry, known as ANCFCC. The reports came after the group claimed to have accessed over four terabytes of land-related data. However, sources from the land registry agency denied that it is the agency's system that was directly targeted, clarifying that the breach involved a notaries' platform, Tawtik, which is managed independently. Le360 quoted an authorized source from ANFCC, who said that no intrusion or data leak has been detected in its information system. Le360 said the Algerian hacking group may have access to data on the notaries' platform by 'exploiting vulnerabilities in inadequately protected computers.' The Moroccan agency sent a letter to notaries warning them about cybersecurity risks, urging them to take all necessary precautions. It also temporarily suspended access to its platform in April and closed the platform entirely to all professionals, reverting to paper-based filling and in-person payments at physical counters to avoid any security breaches. This came when the same group claimed responsibility for the hacking of the National Social Security Fund (CNSS) database. Several documents have gone viral online, with experts warning citizens not to open the files as they could include security threats that could target their data. Earlier this year, the same group claimed responsibility for the hacking of the National Social Security Fund (CNSS) database. The intrusion exposed personal data of nearly 2 million Moroccan employees across 500,000 businesses registered with the Moroccan social security. Morocco has been pledging to strengthen its efforts to ensure strong cybersecurity to tackle similar crises. In April, cybersecurity giant Kaspersky said Morocco ranks among Africa's most frequently targeted countries for digital attacks. The ranking places Morocco third among African countries facing web-based threats, with 12.6 million attack attempts documented in 2024. Kenya tops the list with nearly 20 million incidents, while South Africa follows with approximately 17 million. Web threats targeting African businesses jumped 1.2% compared to 2023, with over 131.5 million total threats detected regionwide this year. In-device threats climbed 4% in African organizations since 2024. Tags: Africa CybersecurityCybersecurity

Morocco : Jabaroot DZ leak was a hit on notaries, not the land registry
Morocco : Jabaroot DZ leak was a hit on notaries, not the land registry

Ya Biladi

time3 days ago

  • Politics
  • Ya Biladi

Morocco : Jabaroot DZ leak was a hit on notaries, not the land registry

DR Initially reported as a hack of the National Agency for Land Conservation, Cadastre, and Cartography (ANCFCC) by Jabaroot DZ, the data leak appears to have actually originated from the notaries' platform, as revealed by our colleagues at Le Desk. When contacted by Yabiladi, a cybersecurity expert explained that the breach came from the Tawtik information system, managed by the National Council of the Order of Notaries. In fact, the leaked documents relate to transactions processed through notaries, and no land titles are included. These are not just property deeds but also powers of attorney and company formation records, which fall outside the scope of the ANCFCC's responsibilities. «It's also worth noting that the leak concerns only the documents available on Tawtik at a specific point in time, not all notarial acts», the expert added. It is therefore unlikely that the volume of pirated data amounts to 4 terabytes, as claimed by Jabaroot DZ. As mentioned earlier, the leak of personal data—targeting figures such as Nasser Bourita, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, and Yassine Mansouri, the head of Morocco's external intelligence agency (DGED)—coincides with the UK's formal support for Morocco's autonomy plan for the Sahara. This appears to be a diversion orchestrated by Algiers. The diplomatic shake-up in London likely explains the confused statement issued last night by Ahmed Attaf, Algeria's Foreign Minister, as well as the convoluted justifications from Jabaroot DZ about the freezing of Algerian dignitaries' assets by French authorities.

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