A cyber attack on the UK-based cosmetics and bath product company Lush has been claimed by the Akira ransomware group.
The incident was first reported on 11 January, with Lush saying it was working with external IT forensic specialists to try to uncover what happened.
“The investigation is at an early stage but we have taken immediate steps to secure and screen all systems in order to contain the incident and limit the impact on our operations,” the company said in a statement. “We take cyber security exceptionally seriously and have informed relevant authorities.”
Now, the Akira ransomware gang appears to have claimed responsibility for the attack.
“110 GB of their files are prepared for uploading. There are a lot of personal documents especially passports. Accounting, finance, tax, projects, clients information and much more could be found in the archives we are going to share,” it says in a post shared by the RansomLock open source ransomware-tracking website.
Lush says it’s now operating largely as normal. However, Brian Boyd, head of technical delivery at security firm i-confidential, says there may be more effects to come.
“Lush is a massive cosmetics company that operates globally, so the perpetrators have potentially gained access to a treasure trove of customer data, which they could use to extort the company or to execute targeted phishing scams,” he says.
“Lush must inform impacted parties as a priority so they can take steps to protect their data. Customers must understand if and how their data has been impacted, because any compromised information could be used against them.”
The Akira group was first observed during spring last year and was found targeting Cisco VPNs that were not configured for multi-factor authentication (MFA). According to Sophos, it has mainly targeted organizations located in Europe, North America, and Australia, attacking sectors as diverse as government, manufacturing, technology, education, consulting, pharmaceuticals, and telecommunications.
The group has already been busy this year, carrying out several attacks: Earlier this month, it was confirmed to be the gang behind the hack of Toronto Zoo, with the group saying it was publishing 133GB of data, including NDAs and confidential agreements, as well as personal files such as drivers’ licences.
It has also claimed responsibility for the recent hack of Finnish IT services and enterprise cloud hosting provider Tietoevry. The attack affected one of Tietoevry’s data centers in Sweden affecting cloud hosting customers including Sweden’s largest cinema chain, Filmstaden, retail chain Rusta, and numerous universities and colleges.
In the last few days, the group has claimed attacks on Brazilian Business Park, ANI Networks, Ding Sheet Metal and Valley Telecom Group.
“It was also responsible for breaching almost 465,000 records in 2023 and had an average ransom of $1 million,” says Rebecca Moody, head of data research at Comparitech.
Lush has been approached for further comment, but had not replied by the time of publication.