JBS, one of the largest meat suppliers across the globe, was recently attacked by a massive ransomware breach. This online attack is quite serious since the giant meat company confirmed that it was forced to pay around $11 million. 

JBS Hack Affects Various Restaurants and Farmers, But Still Handles Attack Better Than Colonial Pipeline
(Photo : Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)
A participant sits with a laptop computer as he attends the annual Chaos Communication Congress of the Chaos Computer Club at the Berlin Congress Center on December 28, 2010 in Berlin, Germany. The Chaos Computer Club is Europe's biggest network of computer hackers and its annual congress draws up to 3,000 participants.

JBS said that it has to do this after its North American and Australian operations were affected. Aside from this, the Brazilian meat supplier also said it temporarily halted cattle slaughtering at all of its U.S. plants for a day last week in response to the cyberattack. 

Various experts and other security critics claimed that the action of JBs could disrupt food supply chains and further inflate already high food prices. And now, security researchers claimed that the recent ransomware attack is currently affecting various restaurants and farmers. 

JBS Ransomware Affects Farmers and Restaurants

According to The Wall Street Journal, the new ransomware hack that targeted JBS could affect various farmers, as well as restaurant reopenings. 

JBS Hack Affects Various Restaurants and Farmers, But Still Handles Attack Better Than Colonial Pipeline
(Photo : Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
A butcher stocks a display case with packages of steaks at a Costco store on May 24, 2021 in Novato, California. According to a Morning Consult survey of 2,200 adult shoppers, one-third of those surveyed say that they are paying more for groceries, especially red meat and chicken.

Also Read: Security Company Now Offers 'Unbreakable Encryption' As Ransomware Attacks Continue to Rise

Experts said that this could happen since food distributors are already struggling to get enough meat competed to replace their pork, beef, and chicken orders to the giant meat supplier. 

Aside from this, when the JBS processing operations went offline, various cattle and pork slaughtered in the United States were reduced. On the other hand, security experts and other involved investigators added that the meat supplies tightened and wholesale beef and pork prices rose.

Based on one distributor, the price of bone-in pork shoulders used to make pulled pork-like barbecue staples rose 25% last week to a record $2.48 per pound. 

JBS Still Handles Attack Better Than Colonial Pipeline? 

Although the JBS ransomware attack also affected smaller farmers and restaurants, some experts and security researchers still claimed that the meat supplier was still able to handle the online breach better than the Colonial Pipeline, another company targeted by a group of hackers. 

Cyber Security Hub reported that, unlike Colonial Pipeline. Specifically, JBS issued press releases on May 30, June 1, June 2, and June 3 to keep customers and the public apprised of the status of the incident. Thanks to this effort, the meat supplier was able to ease the tension regarding the ransomware breach somehow. 

For more news updates about JBS ransomware attacks and other security breaches, always keep your tabs open here at TechTimes.  

Related Article: CD Projekt Red's Data Source Code Circulating Online, Company Says Investigation is Ongoing

This article is owned by TechTimes

Written by: Griffin Davis

ⓒ 2024 TECHTIMES.com All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission.
Join the Discussion