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UK court jails young hackers for massive London transport cyberattack

The pair, aged 18 and 20, hacked into the transport network in 2024, gaining access to around 7 million customers’ names and contacts

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People wait for trains at Westminster Tube station in London. Photo: Reuters
Agence France-Presse
A UK court on Thursday jailed two young men for a 2024 cyberattack on London’s public transport operator that exposed the details of millions of customers, in one of Britain’s biggest data breaches.

Thalha Jubair, 20, from East London, and 18-year-old Owen Flowers from England’s West Midlands were each handed five-and-a-half-year sentences at London’s Woolwich Crown Court.

The pair pleaded guilty last month to hacking Transport for London’s (TfL) network between August 31 and September 3, 2024, gaining access to around 7 million customers’ names and contacts.

Sentencing the men, judge Mark Turner said their actions had caused “very serious” disruption and were motivated primarily by “selfish bravado”.

The attack did not affect transport on TfL’s networks but knocked its services offline for three months, costing the organisation around £25 million (US$33.7 million), according to the judge.

Passengers use fans to cool down on a TfL bus during a heatwave in East London on June 24. Photo: EPA
Passengers use fans to cool down on a TfL bus during a heatwave in East London on June 24. Photo: EPA

TfL, which had to reset the passwords of some 27,000 employees, estimated the attack cost £29 million in damages and £10 million in lost income.

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