European Commission confirms cyber attack on Europa.eu infrastructure

The European Commission has disclosed a cyber attack that affected its cloud infrastructure hosting the Europa.eu websites. Officials stated that data was taken from the sites, and the incident has been contained while investigations continue. Bleeping Computer reported that hackers accessed over 350GB of data, including employee information.

The European Commission announced on March 27 that it experienced a cyber attack targeting the cloud infrastructure behind its web presence on the Europa.eu platform. 'Early findings of our ongoing investigation suggest that data have been taken from [Europa] websites,' the Commission stated in a disclosure. The organization is notifying affected Union entities and has contained the breach, though details on the entry method remain undisclosed pending further review. Bleeping Computer reported that the threat actor gained access to Europa sites and employee data through one of the Commission's Amazon Web Services accounts, extracting around 350GB of information before mitigation efforts took effect. This incident follows a similar breach disclosed in February that also impacted employee data. Commission officials described both events as less severe than the 2024 Salt Typhoon hack on US telecom firms, which compromised data from political campaigns and government officials. In response to rising threats, the European Commission rolled out a new Cybersecurity Package in January 2026, which includes measures for EU states to handle risks from telecom supply chains. The current investigation continues without further public details on the perpetrators or exact scope of compromised information.

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Dramatic illustration of a darknet leak of Swedish government IT data by hackers, showing computer screens with source code, passwords, and personal files.
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Swedish government IT data leaked on darknet

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A hacker group called ByteToBreach has leaked sensitive information from a government IT system on the darknet. The leak includes source code, passwords, and personal data from a platform managed by IT consultant CGI Sweden. Authorities like Cert-SE confirm they are aware of the reports but decline to comment.

A report by the Génération Libre think tank links rising data breaches in France to European regulations. The CNIL is tightening controls after a record year in 2025.

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China's commerce ministry has threatened investigations into the EU or its businesses and reciprocal measures in response to the European Union's January 2026 cybersecurity proposal, which could designate China a 'cybersecurity threat' and list firms like Huawei and ZTE as 'high-risk suppliers' for mandatory removal from 5G networks. The warning comes amid the EU's push to phase out such vendors from telecom, hi-tech sectors, and critical infrastructure within three years.

Tourism group Belambra announced on Saturday that it had been hit by a security incident exposing client reservation data, including that of many minors. The attack follows closely on a similar leak at rival Pierre and Vacances-Center Parcs.

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DIAN stated that an external cybersecurity incident in its Digiturno appointment scheduling system did not compromise citizens' tax, customs, or exchange information. They will keep the virtual system temporarily suspended for ethical hacking tests. In-person service continues normally at 56 points nationwide.

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