A hacking group calling itself Radiant has compromised a UK nursery chain called Kido, and is threatening to release the data it accessed unless a ransom is paid (). On Thursday it posted the profiles of 10 children on a dark web page alongside a "Data Leakage Roadmap" threatening that their next action would be to "release 30 more 'profiles' of each child and 100 employees' private data."
The London Metropolitan Police is investigating. Kido's data was accessed through a breach of another software company, Famly, which is primarily used by childcare organisations.
The BBC managed to contact Radiant through a now-deleted Signal profile. The group said it had hired other people to make the calls. Asked if they feel any guilt about their actions, they responded:
"We do it for money, not for anything other than money. I'm aware we are criminals. This isn't my first time and will not be my last time."
Well, let's hope that the Met can do something about ensuring it is this person's last time. We're all used to cyber attacks in the news, and this certainly isn't the first time a group of criminals has chosen a morally bankrupt target. But doxxing nursery-age children? Even other cyber criminals must feel that such depravity is giving them a bad name.