This Week in Breach News: 

Ransomware sours operations at dairy powerhouse Schreiber Foods, jeweler to the stars Graff is in the wrong kind of spotlight, an old gang with a new name hits the NRA, trouble at the Toronto Transit Commission and a look at the 9 biggest threats from ENISA's Threat Landscape (ETL) report.

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United States: National Rifle Association (NRA)

https://www.theverge.com/2021/10/6/22712250/twitch-hack-leak-data-streamer-revenue-steam-competitor

Exploit: Ransomware

NRA: Gun Rights Activist Group

Risk to Business: 1.417= Severe

Guess who's back? Cybersecurity researchers believe that the notorious Evil Corp has rebranded itself as Grief, the group that has claimed responsibility for a probable ransomware attack at The National Rifle Association (NRA). Grief posted 13 files to its news website last Wednesday after they claimed to have hacked the NRA.

The gang is threatening to release more of the files if they're not paid, but no ransom demand was specified. NBC News reported that the files it saw were related to grants. The samples provided by the gang include blank grant proposal forms, a list of recent grant recipients, an email to a recent grant winner earlier this month, a W-9 form and the minutes from a September 24th NRA teleconference meeting.

Individual Impact: No consumer PII or financial data loss was disclosed in this breach as of press time.

Customers Impacted: Unknown

How It Could Affect Your Business: Data is of immense value to cybercriminals in the booming dark web data markets, and this data will appeal to many different cybercriminal operations

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