4.4 C
New York
Sunday, December 7, 2025
HomeHeadline newsHackers-for-hire targeting law firms, say France & UK

Hackers-for-hire targeting law firms, say France & UK

Date:

Related stories

Mamta Singh makes history as first Indian-American elected to public office in Jersey City

Highlights: Mamta Singh becomes the first Indian American elected...

Is Air India facing drop in flights due to US changing policies?

Highlights: US travel demand for Air India has dropped...

India expands US energy imports to ease trade tensions and diversify supply

Highlights: India signs its first major structured LPG import...

Indian tech worker on H-1B visa sues US firm over forced labor, caste bias

Highlights: Siri Software Solutions and CEO accused of forced...

MERCENARY hackers increasingly are targeting law firms in a bid to steal data that could tip the balance in legal cases, French and British authorities say.

In a pair of reports published over the past week, the cyber watchdog agencies of France and the UK cataloged an array of digital challenges faced by law firms, including threats posed by ransomware and malicious insiders. Both also highlighted the dangers posed by mercenary hackers hired by litigants to filch sensitive information from courtroom opponents.

The London-based National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) said in its report published on June 22 that it was increasingly seeing “hackers-for-hire” brought in “to gain the upper hand in business dealings or legal disputes.”

France’s cyber watchdog, known as ANSSI, said in its report released on Tuesday (27) that “mercenaries with offensive cyber capacities” were increasingly targeting the legal sector. ANSSI cited Reuters reporting last year on how mercenary hackers based out of India were being drafted to help sway high-profile cases in the United States, Europe and elsewhere.

That story – which was based on interviews with victims, researchers, investigators, former US government officials, lawyers and hackers, plus a review of court records and thousands of emails – revealed that hacking groups based in India were responsible for a years-long hacking spree that targeted some 1,000 attorneys at 108 different law firms worldwide. Reuters showed how the hackers made a business out of stealing documents for their clients and, in some cases, trying to enter the ill-gotten material as evidence.

- Advertisement -

The investigation has since been corroborated by researchers at Alphabet-owned Google and Facebook owner Meta Platforms Inc.

Britain’s NCSC and France’s watchdog ANSSI didn’t immediately respond to emails seeking comment.

(Reuters)

Subscribe

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories