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Flight delays continue across Europe after weekend cyber-attack
Flight delays continue across Europe after weekend cyber-attack
The Guardian Lauren Almeida Mon 22 Sep 2025 13.19 CEST First published on Mon 22 Sep 2025 10.03 CEST Software provider Collins Aerospace completing updates after Heathrow, Brussels and Berlin hit by problems Flight delays continue across Europe after weekend cyber-attack Software provider Collins Aerospace completing updates after Heathrow, Brussels and Berlin hit by problems Passengers are facing another day of flight delays across Europe, as big airports continue to grapple with the aftermath of a cyber-attack on the company behind the software used for check-in and boarding. Several of the largest airports in Europe, including London Heathrow, have been trying to restore normal operations over the past few days after an attack on Friday disrupted automatic check-in and boarding software. The problem stemmed from Collins Aerospace, a software provider that works with several airlines across the world. The company, which is a subsidiary of the US aerospace and defence company RTX, said on Monday that it was working with four affected airports and airline customers, and was in the final stages of completing the updates needed to restore full functionality. The European Union Agency for Cybersecurity said on Monday that Collins had suffered a ransomware attack. This is a type of cyber-attack where hackers in effect lock up the target’s data and systems in an attempt to secure a ransom. Airports in Brussels, Dublin and Berlin have also experienced delays. While kiosks and bag-drop machines have been offline, airline staff have instead relied on manual processing. The government’s independent reviewer of terrorism legislation, Jonathan Hall KC, said it was possible state-sponsored hackers could be behind the attack. When asked if a state such as Russia could have been responsible, Hall told Times Radio “anything is possible”. He added that while people thought, “understandably, about states deciding to do things it is also possible for very, very powerful and sophisticated private entities to do things as well”. A spokesperson for Brussels airport said Collins Aerospace had not yet confirmed the system was secure again. On Monday, 40 of its 277 departing flights and 23 of its 277 arriving services were cancelled. A Heathrow spokesperson said the “vast majority of flights at Heathrow are operating as normal, although check-in and boarding for some flights may take slightly longer than usual”. They added: “This system is not owned or operated by Heathrow, so while we cannot resolve the IT issue directly, we are supporting airlines and have additional colleagues in the terminals to assist passengers.”
·theguardian.com·
Flight delays continue across Europe after weekend cyber-attack
European Parliament’s Iran delegation chair victim of Tehran-linked hacking
European Parliament’s Iran delegation chair victim of Tehran-linked hacking
Hannah Neumann was targeted in a cyber-espionage operation by an infamous Iranian hacking group earlier this year, she said. A prominent European Parliament member was the victim of what is believed to be a cyber-espionage operation tied to her role as chair of the chamber's Iran delegation, she told POLITICO. The office of Hannah Neumann, a member of the German Greens and head of the delegation spearheading work on European Union-Iran relations, was targeted by a hacking campaign that started in January, she said. Her staff was contacted with messages, phone calls and emails by hackers impersonating a legitimate contact. They eventually managed to target a laptop with malicious software. "It was a very sophisticated attempt using various ways to manage that someone accidentally opens a link, including putting personal pressure on them," Neumann said.
·politico.eu·
European Parliament’s Iran delegation chair victim of Tehran-linked hacking
La Suisse signe la Convention du Conseil de l’Europe sur l’intelligence artificielle
La Suisse signe la Convention du Conseil de l’Europe sur l’intelligence artificielle
Le conseiller fédéral Albert Rösti signera aujourd’hui à Strasbourg la Convention-cadre du Conseil de l’Europe sur l’intelligence artificielle. Par cet acte, la Suisse rejoint les États signataires d’un premier instrument juridiquement contraignant au niveau international visant à encadrer le développement et l’utilisation de l’IA dans le respect des droits fondamentaux
·swissprivacy.law·
La Suisse signe la Convention du Conseil de l’Europe sur l’intelligence artificielle
Meet NailaoLocker: a ransomware distributed in Europe by ShadowPad and PlugX backdoors
Meet NailaoLocker: a ransomware distributed in Europe by ShadowPad and PlugX backdoors
  • An unknown threat cluster has been targeting at least between June and October 2024 European organizations, notably in the healthcare sector. Tracked as Green Nailao by Orange Cyberdefense CERT, the campaign relied on DLL search-order hijacking to deploy ShadowPad and PlugX – two implants often associated with China-nexus targeted intrusions. The ShadowPad variant our reverse-engineering team analyzed is highly obfuscated and uses Windows services and registry keys to persist on the system in the event of a reboot. In several Incident Response engagements, we observed the consecutive deployment of a previously undocumented ransomware payload. The campaign was enabled by the exploitation of CVE-2024-24919 (link for our World Watch and Vulnerability Intelligence customers) on vulnerable Check Point Security Gateways. IoCs and Yara rules can be found on our dedicated GitHub page here.
·orangecyberdefense.com·
Meet NailaoLocker: a ransomware distributed in Europe by ShadowPad and PlugX backdoors