Crime Instructure confirms data breach, ShinyHunters claims attack - 3.65 terabytes of stolen data to its leak site, alleging that the breach affected 275 million users across nearly 9,000 schools worldwide.

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Educational tech giant Instructure has confirmed that data was stolen in a cyberattack, with the ShinyHunters extortion gang claiming responsibility.

Instructure is a U.S.-based education technology company best known for developing Canvas, a widely used learning management system that helps schools, universities, and organizations manage coursework, assignments, and online learning.

On Friday, Instructure disclosed that it suffered a cybersecurity incident and is working with third-party cybersecurity experts and law enforcement to investigate it.

On Saturday, the company issued an update stating that the personal information of users was exposed in the breach.

"While we continue actively investigating, thus far, indications are that the information involved consists of certain identifying information of users at affected institutions, such as names, email addresses, and student ID numbers, as well as messages among users," reads the updated statement.

"At this time, we have found no evidence that passwords, dates of birth, government identifiers, or financial information were involved. If that changes, we will notify any impacted institutions."

As part of the response, Instructure has deployed patches, increased monitoring, and rotated application keys as a precautionary step.

Customers are required to re-authorize access to Instructure's API for new application keys to be issued.

While Instructure has not responded to BleepingComputer's questions about when the breach occurred and whether they were being extorted, the ShinyHunters extortion gang has now listed the company on its data leak site.

"Nearly 9,000 schools worldwide affected. 275 million individuals data ranging from students, teachers, and other staff containing PII," reads the data leak site.

"Several billions of private messages among students and teachers and students and other students involved, containing personal conversations and other PII. Your Salesforce instance was also breached and a lot more other data is involved."
ShinyHunters claimed that the data was stolen from Instructure via a vulnerability in their systems, which has now been patched.

This data allegedly consists of over 240 million records tied to students, teachers, and staff. The threat actor says the data contains students' names, email addresses, enrolled courses, and private messages to teachers.

Data shared by the threat actor indicates that the alleged dataset spans almost 15,000 institutions hosted across multiple geographic regions, including North America, Europe, and Asia-Pacific.

BleepingComputer has not been able to independently confirm which schools or how many individuals were impacted and has contacted Instructure with additional questions about the threat actor's claims.

Archive.
 
I presume everyone here knows this already, but most US public school systems have one of these massive software boondoggles and you can't get around them.

If you have kids in public schools, you're in shitty software hell for everything to do with the school. Not only all the classwork and academic stuff, but paperwork and teacher communication going through a "portal".

You even have to send permission notes for excused absences through these goddamn things. But don't expect the school system to reduce admin staff, cause reasons.
 
I remember Canvas as a child. IT WAS SHIT. How many years back does this data go???? UHHH
My thoughts exactly. I read the happenings thing and my reaction was HAHAHAHAHAHA.....then it sank in that yeah, I'm probably amongst that leaked data. How far back does it go :o

I'm always down for a Canvas smack-talking session regardless
 
I'm always down for a Canvas smack-talking session regardless
The worst part is that it had the potential to be great. It just wasn't. It ran like shit, was confusing and buggy to use, and was clearly made by some art student instead of someone looking to make something that ran well.
 
I'm probably amongst that leaked data
Tbf everyone is on all kinds of lists no matter how good your opsec is, just living in America requires you to give your info to a bunch of companies that inevitably get breached. All things considered, name and student ID isn't that bad. The private messages will be more interesting.
 
Enjoy reading my shitty international studies paper about applying marxist analysis to the russia ukraine conflict ig
 
Not surprised this happened, only surprised it took this long. Canvas is absolute garbage. It was always amusing to me to watch professors struggle with it. Don't think there will be anything too juicy from a leak like this unless you enjoy reading people's cringy essays or group discussions.
 
ShinyHunters probably stole this breach from another smaller group. Unless this breach contains real PII like IDs or home addresses it's a nothingburger
 
Hacker groups are cool. How do I join one? I wanna be 1337
1. have your sister or mom call me.

My thoughts exactly
No one cares, but at least we've debunked the old adage that "great minds think alike."

Did you ever consider that you and @WelperHelper99 are just...idiots?

Not surprised this happened, only surprised it took this long.
Of course not, you're a mega genius. Everyone knows that. 🤣

Say, what's the next unsurprising thing you think will happen? Ya know, just so we can prepare a bit. News like this can be a real shock to the system of us Plebs.
Who the fuck is giving out home addresses on Canvas? Surely nobody was retarded enough to actually do that.
1. Home address doesn't always mean Street address.

2. You'd be surprised about all the info being pulled about you from every website and mobile app.
 
Not surprised this happened, only surprised it took this long. Canvas is absolute garbage. It was always amusing to me to watch professors struggle with it. Don't think there will be anything too juicy from a leak like this unless you enjoy reading people's cringy essays or group discussions.
By group discussions, you mean people posting LLM blurbs at each other? Oh, wait, I forgot, this generation isn't even smart enough to generate prompts.
 
I watched some students I subed for go over their canvis essay questions and basically agree the teacher was using AI to grade the answers.

Also black board all the way!!
 
What's the difference?
The original/initial antisec movement is what I consider peak blackhat (rooting the servers of security researchers with novel zerodays and mocking them online), these retards just buy access/data and extort for commercial gain. I. e. criminals with a computer toucher sidehustle, not true and honest hackers.
 
What's the difference?
The """good""" black hats do shit like leak corporate or government data showing wrongdoing or take down the infrastructure of entities they disagree with. Hacktivists if you will. They're criminals sure, but these extortion groups are a huge detriment to the average Internet user as well, not just to some large entity being fucked with.
If a hacking group leaked say, the GTA6 source code or a bunch of internal Microsoft documents, it'd be illegal but I would personally not care or may even be happy they did it if it included juicy info. But when they start releasing PII of millions of users it's just being plain evil.
 
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