10 minutes ago
Will JeffordEast Midlands

PA Media
The University of Nottingham said a "significant amount of data" was accessed
Hackers from a well-known cyber criminal group have accessed a "significant amount" of personal student data held by the University of Nottingham.
The university said it was believed the group accessed the data for current students and alumni - including financial information - from its record system.
In an email sent to students, seen by the BBC, chief governance and risk officer Jason Carter said those behind the major cyber-attack, who had "previously targeted a number of other organisations", were likely behind the breach.
In a statement, the university apologised to those affected for "any anxiety" caused.
It is understood the university identified the unauthorised activity on its Campus Solutions system on Tuesday.
All affected students and alumni have since been contacted, a university spokesperson said.
'Comprehensive investigation'
"We are working to understand the data that has been accessed and have contacted those students and alumni affected directly," the university said.
"We are working closely with Action Fraud, the Information Commissioner's Office, and other regulatory bodies.
"We will remain in contact with those directly impacted and will continue to provide updates as the situation develops."
In the email sent to those affected, Carter said, after detecting the attack, the university "immediately took the affected systems offline to contain the incident and launched a comprehensive investigation".
While their investigation continues, the senior staff member said he was operating on the precautionary assumption that four categories of information had been accessed:
- Contact information including names, email and postal addresses
- University-related details including course information, student/staff ID
- Financial information
- Personal information including NI numbers and protected characteristics
"We are working to verify the exact scope of the data accessed and will provide further updates as our investigation confirms these details," Carter added.


Students and staff formed a picket line outside the university in May in protests over job losses
It confirmed it was proposing to cut 609 of its 7,363 full-time equivalent roles over the next three years.
The University and College Union (UCU) said the action would "effectively block the university from handing out graduation certificates".
One of those affected, Abigail Maguire, told the BBC of her fears over plans to use her earlier grades to arrive at her final degree grade, which she says will not reflect her final-year work for which she has been averaging first-class scores.
Maguire said her brother had died before she enrolled at the university, but the loss had created a lasting impact.
"I was struggling with certain traumatic findings from his death, [and] I was also surpassing him in age at that time, which was also really difficult," she said.
"I was also dealing with physical health problems, and it severely affected my course and my grades, so I appealed to the university and explained my situation.
"They didn't give me a choice, they didn't give me an opportunity to take the exams when I was in a better state of mind... I passed, but just about, and they said 'just do better in your third year'.
"I worked really hard in my third year, I managed to average for a first, so that makes up for the lost marks in my second year, and now all of that could just be overridden, and just worthless."

Abigail Maguire
Abigail Maguire is one of many students affected by the ongoing marking boycott at the university

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