Using a now suspended Twitter handle, a hacker who said they
were from Brazil claimed to have obtained the data of 28,000
officers by infiltrating Indonesia's national police server,
according to local media reports.
The hacker said the information compromised included names, home
addresses, emails, phone numbers and blood types.
"Right now we are handling the case, and it is being looked into
by the cybercrime unit," said police spokesman, Dedi Prasetyo,
without providing further details.
The incident follows an attack claimed by the same hacker last
month on Indonesia's Cyber and Encryption Agency (BSSN).
The BSSN did not immediately respond to a request for comment on
the recent data breaches.
The hacks have highlighted digital security vulnerabilities at
state agencies in Indonesia, which has one of the world's
biggest online markets.
In August, a flaw in the health ministry's COVID-19 app exposed
the personal data and health status of 1.3 million people. The
same week the president's own vaccine certificate was leaked.
A month later, police confirmed they were also investigating an
alleged hack at the country's intelligence agency, and 10
government ministries by a group known as Mustang Panda.
Indonesia has seen a rise in cyber attacks, with 888 million
attempts recorded from January to August, according to data from
the national cyber agency.
Wahyudi Djafar, executive director of local Institute for Policy
Research and Advocacy, a non-governmental organisation, called
for more transparency around investigations of data breaches in
Indonesia.
"The challenge is, every time there's a data breach that
involves public institutions, there hasn't been an investigation
process that's done with accountability," he said.
(Reporting by Stanley Widianto; Writing by Kate Lamb; Editing by
John Geddie)
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