Toyota supplier Denso hit by suspected cyberattack: NHK

Published Sun, Mar 13, 2022 · 11:03 AM

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    [TOKYO] Denso Corp, a top Toyota Motor Corp supplier, was targeted by group of hackers threatening to disclose its industrial secrets unless the Japanese maker of electronic car parts paid ransom money, national broadcaster NHK reported. A representative for Denso said that there was an unauthorised access to its network in Germany, NHK reported. A call to Denso outside regular business hours was not answered.

    If confirmed, the incident would mark the second recent cyberattack against a Toyota supplier. The world's top carmaker idled all its factories in Japan 2 weeks ago after parts supplier Kojima Press Industry Co was hit by an attack to its systems. Although production resumed after a day, the incident was yet another blow to Toyota as it was seeking to recover production lost in recent months to chip shortages and Covid-related disruptions. "We are hearing from Denso that there's no impact on business operations," said Hideaki Homma, a spokesman for Toyota.

    Pandora, the group that allegedly accessed Denso's systems, threatened to disclose the supplier's trade secrets including email, invoices and part diagrams on a website on the Dark Web, NHK reported, citing Japanese cybersecurity firm Mitsui Bussan Secure Directions Inc. Toyota, which had been relatively resilient to supply chain snags through most of the pandemic, has been trying to ramp up production to make up for lost output and meet soaring global demand for new vehicles. Akio Toyoda, the carmaker's chief executive officer, said last week that the company would have to review its production plans due to mounting global disruptions.

    Toyota's production fell 15 per cent in January as the company halted output in the Chinese city of Tianjin when the government carried out multiple rounds of mass testing for Covid-19 on residents. In February, some of Toyota's North American operations were affected by protests that shut some of the main trade routes between the US and Canada. Cyberattacks have risen in Japan in recent years. Authorities identified 12,275 cybercrime cases in the country last year, a record high, according to Japan's National Police Agency. Japan's manufacturing industry is the largest target for crimes such as ransomware attacks. BLOOMBERG

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