Ransomware victim disclosure
← All victimsTriella
Claimed by ALPHV/BlackCat · listed 3 years ago
Status timeline
- ListedJan 11, 2024
- Data leakeddate unknown
At a glance
- Group
- ALPHV/BlackCat
- Status
- Data leaked
- Country
- Canada
- Listed on leak site
- Jan 11, 2024
About the victim
AI dossier — public-source company profileUnable to verify. The domain triella.com currently serves unrelated content (a lottery/gambling site 'DOMTOTO'), suggesting the original Triella website is no longer active or the domain has been compromised/repurposed. The victim name may be a shell company, defunct entity, or the domain may be unrelated to the actual victim.
Attack summary
Severity: low — No operational impact, data exfiltration, or proof demonstrated. Post is purely an announcement with rhetorical criticism; no evidence of actual breach or data publication.ALPHV/BlackCat claims to have attacked a Canadian cybersecurity company that offered cloud solutions and customized network infrastructure. The group criticizes the victim for offering security services while themselves being vulnerable to ransomware. No specific data exfiltration, encryption, or proof is mentioned in the post.
What the group claims
Canada. Useless cyber security company. Have presented cloud solutions. Have customized their clients network infrastructure in the past. Also falsely and hypocritically told how destructive ransomware can be.
Sources
- Victim sitetriella.com
Source
Indexed 3 years agoThis page surfaces a public ransomware disclosure indexed by Darkfield. Original posts come from the operator's own leak site; we cross-check against ransomware.live, RansomLook and RansomWatch where applicable. Share this URL freely.
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