A ransomware team called Hunters International has published some of the data that it claims to have been stolen by Tata Technologies, just over a month after the Indian company was confirmed by a ransomware attack that resulted in the suspension of certain services.
The leakage data, published on the gang leak web site – which has been seen by TechCrunch – includes personal information about some of today’s Tata Technologies officials and former employees, as well as confidential information, including market order and company contracts with customers in India and the United States.
The Ransomware gang states that the data set includes over 730,000 documents, including Excel’s spreads, PowerPoint presentations and PDF files, totaling about 1.4 terabytes in size.
At the end of January, Tata Technologies briefed Indian stock markets about a ransomware attack that influenced “few” of the company’s assets. At that time, Tata said its customer services “remained fully functional and unaffected throughout”.
It is not clear whether the data uploaded by the Ransomware Hunters group relate to the ransomware attack revealed by Tata Technologies earlier this year. When TechCrunch has come into contact many times, Tata representatives have not yet provided comments.
Founded in 1989 as a Tata Motors car unit, Tata Technologies started as a separate company in 1994 and operates as a subsidiary of the Tata Group Group since then.
Tata Technologies provides mechanical and research and development services in automakers, aerospace equipment manufacturers and engineering companies in 27 countries. The company has 20 delivery centers and over 12,500 employees, per website of.
Superficial in late 2023Hunters International is a relatively new Ransomware-A-A-Service team, which hires its infrastructure to work with ransomware attacks and Hunters International is taking a cut of revenue from ransom payments.
Hunters International also seems to have some links with the Ransomware Hive gang, which law enforcement services are largely disturbed in 2023.
