Several significant cyber security breaches have prompted a growing data security crisis for one of the largest private higher education institutions in the United States. University of Phoenix, an established for-profit university located in Phoenix, Arizona, has suffered an extensive network intrusion.
It was orchestrated by the Clop ransomware group, a highly motivated cybercriminal syndicate that was well known for extorting large sums of money from their victims.
During the attack, nearly 3.5 million individuals’ personal records, such as those belonging to students, faculty, administrative staff, and third-party suppliers, were compromised, resulting in the compromise of the records.
Established in 1976, the university has grown over the last five decades into a major national educational provider. The university has enrolled approximately 82,700 students and is supported by a workforce of 3,400 employees.
Of these, nearly 2,300 are academics.
This breach was officially confirmed by the institution through a written statement posted on its website on early December, while Phoenix Education Partners’ parent organization, which filed a mandatory 8-K filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, formally notified federal regulators of the incident in early December.
In this disclosure, the first authoritative acknowledgment of a breach that experts claim may have profound implications for identity protection, financial sec
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