Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Security

Top Meat Supplier is the Latest Victim of a Cyberattack (axios.com) 45

Major meat supplier JBS USA was the latest victim of an organized cybersecurity attack, with servers in North American and Australian affected, the company said Sunday. From a report: Why it matters: JBS USA is the largest producer of beef in the country, The Hill notes, and also is a major supplier of poultry and pork. The disclosure of the attack comes as cyber threats have picked up over the last year. Last month, Colonial Pipeline was taken offline by its operator because of a cyberattack.

In March, a cyber-espionage unit backed by the Chinese government resulted in 30,000 U.S. victims, including many small businesses and local governments. Earlier this year, the U.S. intelligence community assessed that Russia was responsible for the major SolarWinds attack. Nine federal agencies and more than 100 private sector groups were compromised in the attack, per the Hill.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Top Meat Supplier is the Latest Victim of a Cyberattack

Comments Filter:
  • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Tuesday June 01, 2021 @04:27PM (#61444736)

    Sooner or later, but not vert much later. I personally know of 3 incidents that did not make the press and that were all up and running within 2 days again because they were prepared and could recover without paying anybody, but any business not expecting to get hit soon is run by fools.

    • if data is also stolen, because the attackers can continue to blackmail the companies by threatening to release the data. How much is it worth to keep your competitors from seeing your books, emails, future plans. What might your employees think about seeing everyones salary? Done anything legally questionable that the police or regulators might be interested in? If nothing else it shows your customers you are vulnerable.

      It is also possible for the attackers to have a dead man switch in their attack co

      • You raise a good point - if your data is not encrypted as appropriate, then you are vulnerable to blackmail.

        So not only do we have idiot management not allocating enough resources to do decent backups, we now also have idiot management failing to allocate for encryption.
        Yet - somehow - they continually manage to give themselves huge bonuses.

        Perhaps there is a disconnect between what management claims, and what they are actually doing?

        The BIOS hacking is a whole other level. Then again, it can be fixed by p

        • by gweihir ( 88907 )

          Nope. "Date encryption" protects data at rest, e.g. a laptop that is off or a server that is not running. It does zero to deter hackers from copying that data. They come via the API or the application.

  • by marcle ( 1575627 ) on Tuesday June 01, 2021 @04:29PM (#61444744)

    I don't care about gasoline, but keep your stinkin' mitts off my bacon!

  • they continue to do state sponsors shit against other countries, stealing technology and generally not giving a fuck about patents of any kind...

    ..And yet the world continues to deal with the Chinese...

    • by iggymanz ( 596061 ) on Tuesday June 01, 2021 @04:56PM (#61444850)

      Nonsense, target too small time for Chinese government to have any interest. Blaming a government for small hacker's action is U.S. propaganda. The truth is a tiny group or one person can take out a poorly protected target; the fault of all these "Russian" and Chinese" attacks is 100 percent the stupid lazy target that didn't take basic precautions.

    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      Yeah, well, that kind of stuff is too easy to fake, so they don't know squat. The whodunit is all pure speculation and scapegoating for the war effort and to keep our minds off domestic problems.

      • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

        If only there was a bloody war effort!

        You'd think after a year of supply chain challenges for basic goods, long delays in domestic adaptation, and now a string of 'cyber attacks on multi-nationals' the THREAT of globalism and the efficient but brittle market 'free trade' has given us would be clear.

        This is a failed experiment - its time to reverse course!

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      That wonderful Mr. Xi cares deeply about our health; red meat is not good for us. I'll send him a thankful postcard.

  • ...it's war, man!

  • Blaming a government for what one lone cracker could do easily seems to be the new way of US trying to stir up patriotism. Annoying disruption to meat supplier is hardly attractive to Chinese government.

  • I'm not eating meat with cybers in it!

    Cyber cyber cyber cyber cyber, use that word a lot and you'll be cooler than a cigarette smoker!

  • I live in North American too, same as some of the affected servers.

    Is there anyone here who lives in Australian?

  • This article with hyperlinked sources can be found here: www.tritorch.com/fi

    Please share that link if you think the information is worth sharing.

    Future Imperfect

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

    June 2009, in the midst of the swine flu breakout the World Health Organization defangs their working definition of 'pandemic' by removing the requirement of "enormous numbers of deaths and illnesses".

    Like magic, the WHO can now declare pandemics far more easily triggering billion dollar contracts with pharmaceutical

  • I've worked in professional IT and know a lot of others who do as well. This happened because the more old commercial and industrial the company is, the less they know or care about spending on proper IT infrastructure, backups, stable and up to date software, etc. The worst of the worst of the worst is trucking companies, mechanics, etc. Second worst from what I hear is food manufacturers because of their margins. Third worst are American call centers. I know one that went through 3 CIOs in 3 years after t
    • But even good IT infrastructure has problems and 100% uptime is like trying to break light speed. It requires logarithmically increasing resource inputs for scalar increases in reliability (or velocity, for the speed metaphor).

      AFAIK, Netflix is one of the few cases of a company that baked in fault tolerance and continuous fault generation testing to enhance it. But in many ways they had it easy, they are all digital and run on a cloud platform that makes it possible, partly because they were a from-scratc

    • by bn-7bc ( 909819 )
      I susoect the the problem is that CxO level people above, let's say 45 outside the IT industry seas IT as a cost center, so what hapoenes when costs need to be cut for whatever reason? Ding Ding Ding, IT gets cut because they might not be able/willing to cut anything else, and how cares about what those smelly nerds say anyway, we have checked all the compliance checkboxes so if soneone sues us the insurance will take care of it

I use technology in order to hate it more properly. -- Nam June Paik

Working...