UK Electoral Commission finally recovered from China hack after three years and £250,000 grant


- The United Kingdom’s electoral commission has now recovered from a cyber attack
- Recovery took three years and £ 250,000
- We do not know what the attackers won in the intrusion
After three long years, the United Kingdom’s electoral commission is finally completely recovered after a cyber attack that left the organization in shock.
The commission was officially reprimanded by the office of commissioners of information on security percussion who left millions of British voters vulnerable to pirates. “
Addressing the BBC for the first time about the incident, the CEO of the electoral commission, Vijay Rangarajan, who was not CEO at the time of the attack, said that his colleagues described the discovery of pirates as “the impression of having been robbed inside the house”.
Insufficient protections
There were six by -elections at the time when pirates were inside computer networks, but the commission confirmed that there is no proof of falsification.
The Commission used a subsidy of £ 250,000 to facilitate its recovery and now spends much more in its cybersecurity budget.
That said, the Commission still does not know exactly what information has been exfiltrated or what the objectives of the pirates were with intrusion. There have been examples of network intrusions with serious consequences, with government agencies and public organizations struck by ransomware attacks around the world.
“All of this could have caused us incredible problems. It was a dangerous thing to have happened,” he said. “I do not think that everyone has realized how much democratic systems and electoral systems were targets. We tended to be quite comfortable in the way we direct things. We must now be really aware of threats,” he said.
In recent years, the world’s elections have been targeted and governments have faced a huge increase in cyber attacks from threat actors who seek to disrupt democracy and undermine governments and processes.



