American photography Shutterfly reported a ransomware attack that impacted some of its services, and threat actors stole the corporate data.
- Shutterfly suffered a ransomware attack by the Conti gang, who claims to have encrypted over 4,000 devices and 120 VMware ESXi servers.
- The company states that no financial data was disclosed.
American photography Shutterfly reported a ransomware attack that impacted some of its services, and threat actors stole the corporate data.
The ransomware attack compromised parts of the Lifetouch and BorrowLenses business, Groovebook manufacturing, and some corporate systems that have been experiencing interruptions.
According to BleepingComputer, Shutterfly systems were infected with Conti ransomware who claims to have encrypted over 4,000 devices and 120 VMware ESXi servers
Conti has created a private Shutterfly data leak page containing screenshots of files allegedly stolen during a ransomware attack as part of this “double-extortion” tactic. The attackers threaten to make this page public if a ransom is not paid.
The screenshots include legal agreements, bank and merchant account info, spreadsheets, login credentials for corporate services and customer info, including the last four digits of credit cards.
“Shutterfly, LLC recently experienced a ransomware attack on parts of our network. This incident has not impacted our Shutterfly.com, Snapfish, TinyPrints or Spoonflower sites,” reads the statement issued by the company.
The company added that Shutterfly.com, TinyPrints.com, Snapfish.com and Spoonflower were not impacted.
Shutterfly does not store the credit card numbers, other financial data and Social Security numbers.
“However, understanding the nature of the data that may have been affected is a key priority, and that investigation is ongoing. We will continue to provide updates as appropriate.”
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