Australian rare earths firm says data leaked day after Chinese investors blocked
- On Monday, Australia ordered 5 China-linked shareholders to sell off a combined 10 per cent stake in Northern Minerals
- About 24 hours later, hackers said they had stolen sensitive financial and personal data from the publicly listed company
Anonymous hackers on Tuesday leaked data stolen from an Australian rare earths mining company, just one day after Chinese shareholders were given a deadline to offload their stake in the business.
Northern Minerals is vying to challenge China’s overwhelming dominance of dysprosium production, a rare earth mineral that is used to make high-performance magnets used in electric vehicles.
The company said Tuesday it had “been the subject of a cybersecurity breach” – and that the stolen data had been “released on the dark web”.
The data had been swiped in late March, Northern Minerals told the Australian Stock Exchange, but was only now being leaked.
Australian Treasurer Jim Chalmers on Monday ordered five China-linked shareholders to sell off a combined 10 per cent stake in Northern Minerals, saying such foreign ownership was against Australia’s “national interest”.
About 24 hours later, hackers said they had stolen sensitive financial and personal data from the publicly listed company.
The hackers did not mention Chalmers’s decision to block Chinese shareholders, according to a screenshot shared on social media, and it was not immediately clear if the cyberattack was linked to that decision.