Russian hackers claim shut down of French cybersecurity agency website

27 Aug, 2024 13:09 / Updated 4 months ago
Several other government sites were also attacked following the arrest of Telegram founder and CEO Pavel Durov in Paris

The website of the French National Cybersecurity Agency was reportedly hacked and temporarily brought down following the arrest of Telegram founder and CEO Pavel Durov in Paris over the weekend. The EvilWeb hacker group, which says it’s from Russia, has claimed responsibility for the hack. 

While the website seems to be up and running now, the Baza Telegram channel had previously reported that it had been inaccessible since Monday. The agency in question is the same one that is reportedly investigating the Durov case. The Russian tech entrepreneur could face up to a dozen charges for supposedly allowing cybercriminals and drug traffickers to use his messaging app with impunity. 

“The French National Cyber Unit is going offline,” EvilWeb wrote on its Telegram channel. “France, you seriously trusted such an agency to conduct an investigation?” 

In a follow-up message on Tuesday, the group said that while it was not fully satisfied with the scale of the attack, it will continue its work, aiming to inflict “maximum damage on France” and “protect” Durov. 

Following the Russian billionaire’s arrest, the Le Parisien newspaper reported that nearly a dozen other French government websites had also been subjected to Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks, which aim to make a server inaccessible by overloading it with requests.  

Those attacks were also supposedly carried out by Russian or pro-Russian hacker groups, according to the French media, and targeted the websites for the French Public Service, the National Medicines Safety Agency, the La Voix du Nord newspaper, as well as other government websites. 

According to the outlet, citing cybersecurity experts, the attacks are expected to intensify and continue over the next few days. 

Durov was arrested at France’s Le Bourget Airport last Saturday “in connection with a judicial investigation” initiated on July 8, according to a press release issued by the Paris Public Prosecutor’s Office on Monday. 

The probe, which was opened by the French National Cybersecurity Agency against an unnamed individual, includes various charges such as complicity in drug trafficking, fraud, money laundering, and child pornography distribution.  

Telegram, meanwhile, has insisted that the app abides by EU law, including the Digital Services Act, and noted that its “moderation practices are aligned with industry standards.” The company added that “it is absurd to claim that a platform or its owner is responsible for the misuse of that platform.”