SC verifying report that its data had been reportedly breached

Supreme Court says no evidence found on alleged breach

By: - Reporter / @luisacabatoINQ
/ 01:52 PM August 28, 2024

AFFIRMED The high tribunal sided with the Commission on Audit, which said in 2011 the gratuity benefits were unnecessary and excessive as the firm had been incurring losses. —INQUIRER FILE PHOTO

INQUIRER FILE PHOTO

MANILA, Philippines — The Supreme Court (SC) said it found no evidence of a data breach as of Wednesday afternoon, despite a cybersecurity group reporting a “significant security breach” affecting the High Court.

But the SC said it will still continue to investigate and employ the right amount of redundancy by approaching the investigation from many angles.

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“The Supreme Court and its service providers launched an immediate investigation and, as of this afternoon, found no evidence of a breach or indication that sensitive data was compromised,” it said in a statement.

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“As a precautionary measure, and although regularly done, we will do another round of Vulnerability and Penetration Testing assessment (VAPT) and have asked our providers and partners to do the same. We are also going to conduct another external review of our cybersecurity systems,” it added.

The SC noted that it has always prioritized cybersecurity and that they have layers of in-house and external cybersecurity.

READ: PH is 29th out of 250 countries with most data breaches in Q2 of 2024

On Wednesday morning, group Deep Web Konek said that a security breach occurred on August 27 compromising sensitive legal data of over 13,000 records.

These include names, case details, and payment information from the Judicial Electronic Payment System.

SC spokesperson Atty. Camille Ting earlier told reporters in a Viber message that they would verify the report.

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TAGS: data breach, Supreme Court

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