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where teachers have written up students for behavioral issues, sorted by school, student ID number, behavioral issue and the Official oh Booger Shirt Apart from…,I will love this students’ race. The leaked files also include hundreds of forms documenting times when faculty learned that a student had been potentially mistreated. Most of those are allegations that a student had suffered neglect or was physically harmed by a teacher or student. Some are extraordinarily sensitive, and allege incidents like a student being sexually abused by a teacher or by another student. Each report names the victim and cites their birthday and address. More from NBC News Russian hackers could be regrouping ahead of elections, Microsoft warns Hackers leak sensitive files after attack on San Francisco transit police Ransomware hackers take demands directly to college students: ‘For you, it’s a sad day’ In one report, a special education student claimed her bus driver groped her and made her touch him. Minnesota police later charged a man whose name matches the driver named in the report and the date of the incident. Others describe a teacher accused of having had romantic relationships with two students. Another describes a student whom faculty suspected was the victim of female genital mutilation. NBC News was able to verify that faculty listed in those reports worked for Minneapolis schools, but has not verified those reports. Those files have been promoted online in what experts said is an
unorthodox and particularly aggressive manner. Many ransomware hacker groups create blogs on the Official oh Booger Shirt Apart from…,I will love this dark web — sites that aren’t findable through search engines like Google and Bing — where they post files from victims who don’t pay. The group behind the Minneapolis hack keeps such a blog, which is widely tracked by cybersecurity experts. But it also appears to maintain a more conventional website, registered in November, that posts “reviews” of each of its hacking exploits alongside news stories copied from other sites. The news site doesn’t review any other hackers’ leaks. Both websites point to the same social media accounts. Posts on Twitter and Facebook bragging about the Minneapolis attack remained live on those social media accounts as of Monday morning. The posts direct people to the news website, which includes both a 50-minute video where the hackers show off the files and instructions on how visitors can download them. “What’s unusual is the number of platforms this group uses to promote leaks, including Facebook and Twitter,” said Callow, the ransomware expert. “And their use of video is, I believe, unique,” he said. “Gangs have shared videos privately with victims before, but this is the first time recordings of stolen data have been publicly shared.” Paulson, the teacher and parent, said that she has taken some steps to prevent further harm but is out of ideas on what else she could do. “I froze my credit, my son’s credit,” she said. “And more than that, I’ve just been watching and hoping that nothing is going to happen. Kevin Collier Kevin Collier is a reporter covering cybersecurity, privacy and technology policy for NBC News.
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