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Providence’s Refusal to Acknowledge Sensitive Student Data Leak Feels Familiar

M.Cooper34 min ago

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Medusa's back at it.

The cybergang, which has become notorious for devastating ransomware attacks on K-12 school systems, has claimed the Providence, Rhode Island, district as its latest victim, leaking tens of thousands of sensitive student records on its Telegram channel.

Yet the district remains unaware — or is perhaps unwilling to admit — that students' private affairs have entered the public domain. Sexual misconduct reports. Special education records. Medical records. Vaccine histories. All are available with a Google search and a few mouse clicks.

So why won't the district acknowledge to parents and students that their information was stolen? It's a refusal I've seen repeated again and again while reporting on school cyberattacks over the last few years.

Earlier this month, the Providence district spokesman told reporters that an ongoing investigation had uncovered "no evidence that any personal information for students has been impacted." Yet when The 74 presented the district this week with evidence to the contrary, he doubled down. Third-party consultants are conducting "a comprehensive review" to determine what files were stolen, he told The 74 without uttering the word "student."

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The files have been available for download for nearly a month. The state education department spokesperson told me — in an unsolicited phone call this week after catching wind of my latest investigation — that nobody (except me, apparently) was previously able to access the breached records.

"No one had actually gone in to see the files," he said.

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Emotional Support

Leo, who lives with my colleague Jo Napolitano, came prepared for school photo day.

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