º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Manufacturing

Jaguar Land Rover cyber attack: Staff told to 'stay at home' as deliveries delayed

An umbrella collection of hacker groups has claimed responsibility for the breach

Jaguar Land Rover sign outside the factory on Lode lane, Solihull.(Image: Nick Wilkinson/Birmingham Live)

Thousands of employees at Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) have been instructed to 'remain at home', whilst customers face significant delivery delays following a cyber attack that compelled the firm to cease production across all its facilities.

The breach, which commenced on Sunday, brought operations at Britain's largest car manufacturer to a standstill across sites in Solihull, Halewood, Wolverhampton and Castle Bromwich, affecting retail systems during one of the year's peak periods for new vehicle registrations, as reported by .

Dealerships have been unable to process certain new '76' number plates introduced on 1 September, resulting in extended waiting times for customers, some of whom have already traded in their previous vehicles.

JLR, which operates under Indian conglomerate Tata Motors, confirmed it had "proactively shut down" systems to limit the cyber incident and was "working at pace" to reinstate normal operations.

The company emphasised there was "no evidence" of customer information being compromised and has notified the Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) of the breach.

Hacker group claims responsibility

A consortium known as 'scattered lapsus$ hunters', comprising an alliance of the 'shiny hunters', 'lapsus$' and 'scattered spider' factions, has taken credit for the attack.

These affiliated groups have all been connected to significant corporate security breaches over the past twelve months.

Sam Kirkman, director of services at NetSPI, observed that this incident demonstrates how increasingly unpredictable cybercriminals are becoming through collaborative efforts. "JLR has stated that they took proactive steps to contain the breach and minimise its impact, which is commendable" he said.