CBSE Revaluation Portal Hit by Cyberattack, Payment Gateway Glitch Affects Students

 

A breach has surfaced within CBSE’s digital infrastructure, casting doubt on transaction reliability during revaluation requests. Officials confirm unusual activity emerged just hours after launch of the updated platform. Instead of standard fees, some users saw inflated amounts appear without explanation. The disruption stemmed from external interference, not internal error, per preliminary assessments. While access resumed quickly, trust in online payments wavered temporarily among applicants. Investigators are now tracing entry points used in the intrusion. Security teams emphasize that only a small fraction faced actual financial impact. Monitoring continues as safeguards undergo review. 

Some fifty learners faced disruptions due to the event, officials noted. Payment amounts shifted without warning in these instances – now low at just one rupee, now near sixty-seven or sixty-eight thousand. Unauthorized entry might have paved the way for intentional system interference, according to insiders. Such altered fees possibly stemmed from targeted digital tampering following a breach.

Trouble began when the portal’s payment gateway – handled by HDFC Bank – faced glitches after launch. Right away, access problems appeared, blocking user entry without warning. 

A few people took advantage while systems faltered, altering charges shown on student records. Officials confirmed irregular fees stemmed from these brief security lapses.

Following the event, CBSE along with state bodies began closely examining the system’s framework. To support this effort, specialists from IIT Madras, joined by counterparts at IIT Kanpur and the Digital Infrastructure Corporation of India, were invited into the process. With access granted, these teams started analyzing the underlying software structure and identifying weak points. 

One main goal drives their work: keeping the service stable under pressure. By reinforcing key defenses now, they aim to block repeat disruptions later.

Now live within the platform, four state-run lenders join the network to spread risk beyond one vendor. Among them: State Bank of India, followed by Canara Bank, then Indian Bank, and later Bank of Maharashtra. With more institutions linked, handling payments should run smoother under strain. Built-in backup paths emerge naturally when multiple entry points exist. Stability gains come not from promises but structure – extra layers help maintain flow during outages. 

Later came reports of trouble faced by students after results and rechecking, sparking talks between Dharmendra Pradhan and Nirmala Sitharaman. Because of these concerns, officials decided improvements were needed in how payments work across CBSE platforms.

So far, reports indicate the updated setup is running smoothly after shifting the platform to Amazon Web Services (AWS). This move comes in response to past issues with traffic handling and long-term flexibility. Teams remain alert, observing both function and protection measures closely during ongoing evaluations. 

What happened shows why protecting school systems matters more now, given how much personal information and money flows through them. Even so, officials keep digging into the case even as new security steps go live to reduce risks ahead.

This article has been indexed from CySecurity News – Latest Information Security and Hacking Incidents

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