British Library falls victim to cyber attack

Sergey Nivens – stock.adobe.com

The British Library is experiencing a major IT outage following a cyber incident of an undisclosed nature

Alex Scroxton

By

Published: 31 Oct 2023 16:15

The British Library has disclosed that it has experienced a cyber attack of an undisclosed nature, that has caused multiple technology systems at the institution to go down.

The organisation first confirmed there was an ongoing IT outage via its X (Twitter) account at 5:40pm on Sunday 29 October, but it has taken a couple of days to establish that there is a cyber dimension to its plight.

“We’re experiencing a major technology outage as a result of a cyber incident,” a spokesperson said via X. “This is affecting our website, online systems and services, and some onsite services including public Wi-Fi. We’re currently investigating the incident with @NCSC and other specialists. We know that you may have questions, but please bear with us while we gather more information. We’ll update as regularly as we can.”

At the time of writing, the British Library’s website remains offline, but Computer Weekly understands the library’s facilities in London and Yorkshire remain open, with reading rooms for personal study still available, as well as collections for orders made prior to 26 October. A manual collection item ordering service via its printed catalogues is also available at its London site, although this is limited in its scope.

A cyber incident of this nature will inevitably draw speculation that the British Library has been hit by ransomware, although at the time of writing, this is entirely unconfirmed. Citing sources familiar with the situation, The Register earlier reported that the incident may stem from issues on the library’s VMware ESXi virtual machine (VM) infrastructure.

Given their widespread popularity in enterprise cloud environments, the VMware ESXi family is known to be a growing vector for ransomware infections, and most extant crews have now developed encryptors targeting the platform.

Back in February 2023, a widespread campaign of attacks dubbed ESXiArgs exploited a two-year-old heap buffer overflow flaw in the platform, apparently using a variant of the Babuk ransomware locker. Others are thought to have taken advantage of the Log4Shell vulnerability to conduct their attacks.

Huge collection

As the UK’s national library – and one of the largest libraries in the world, the British Library’s collection holds over 150 million items in over 400 languages, from books, magazines, manuscripts and newspapers to maps and music scores, patents and postage stamps, prints and drawings, and even sound recordings.

Besides its core functionality, the British Library hosts regular cultural events and exhibitions – its current show, Fantasy: Realms of Imagination is still open despite the cyber attack, although it can currently only accept cash payments.

The exhibition explores the evolution of the fantasy genre from ancient folk myths and fairy tales to modern-day fantasy fiction, TV and movies, and includes manuscripts of works by Alan Garner, CS Lewis and Terry Pratchett, costumes from The Lord of the Rings, and clips from Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

Read more on Data breach incident management and recovery

Read More
Yuri Menjivar

Latest

Too Little, Too Late? Sony Music Fires Off Blanket Warning Against the AI Mining of Its Catalog

Too little, too late? Sony Music has fired off a blanket warning against the unauthorized training of AI systems on its song catalog and other IP. The overarching Sony Music Group today made that clear-cut announcement on behalf of Sony Music Entertainment (SME) as well as its various subsidiaries and Sony Music Publishing (SMP). Spanning

Pandora Hits Back at MLC Lawsuit Over Streaming Royalties: ‘Legally Incoherent’

Music In a strongly-worded response, Pandora says the royalties...

Newsletter

Don't miss

Too Little, Too Late? Sony Music Fires Off Blanket Warning Against the AI Mining of Its Catalog

Too little, too late? Sony Music has fired off a blanket warning against the unauthorized training of AI systems on its song catalog and other IP. The overarching Sony Music Group today made that clear-cut announcement on behalf of Sony Music Entertainment (SME) as well as its various subsidiaries and Sony Music Publishing (SMP). Spanning

Pandora Hits Back at MLC Lawsuit Over Streaming Royalties: ‘Legally Incoherent’

Music In a strongly-worded response, Pandora says the royalties...

News24 Business | For R350 a month, residents of informal settlements can use a waterless toilet

Qaqamba Matundu Share your Subscriber Article You have 5 articles to share every month. Send this story to a friend! Loading, please wait... Subscribers can listen to this article A waterless toilet provides clean and safe sanitation for informal residents (Ntando Mbhele/ Supplied). A waterless flushing toilet, to help communities that lack water and sanitation

Want to succeed in business? Find a problem to solve | Anthony Tan and Amane Dannouni

Update requirements Looking for ted.com? v95+ v58+ v13+ v96+ v82+ Looks like your browser is out of date For questions contact us at support@ted.com

News24 Business | Garth Theunissen | SENS needs fixing, but the JSE disagrees

Subscribers can listen to this article The JSE building in Sandton. (Fivepointsix/Getty) While the JSE has made efforts to simplify its listing requirements, little evidence of this can be seen in many an indecipherable regulatory announcement. Given the plethora of scandals involving JSE-listed companies in recent years, perhaps it's time to consider some plainer language