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Renault shuts down sites after being hit by cyberattack

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French carmaker Renault is the latest major organisation to be hit by the massive wave of cyberattacks sweeping the globe, the company's management said on Saturday.

"We have been affected," a spokeswoman told AFP, saying they were assessing the situation to try to find a solution. "Work is going on since last night. We are doing what is needed to counter this attack," she added.

Car production was halted in Slovenia after computers at the headquarters of Renault's subsidiary Revoz in Novo Mesto were affected, a spokeswoman told AFP.

"We can confirm that on Friday, May 12, some problems occurred on certain parts of Revoz's information system that led to the halting of production during the night," the spokeswoman said.

Production remained suspended Saturday, she added.

Renault also announced Saturday that the cyberattack had forced it to stop production at sites in France, part of several measures being taken to stop the virus from spreading.

It did not identify the sites, but a union source said the factory at Sandouville in Normandy was one of the main sites affected.

Ransomware: how hackers take your data hostage
Ransomware: how hackers take your data hostage
Simon MALFATTO, Iris de VERICOURT, Jonathan JACOBSEN, AFP

A spokesman at the site, which normally produces about 640 utility vehicles a day, confirmed it had been a victim of the cyberattack.

"Production was affected overnight but luckily there was no full production scheduled for this weekend, only some 'stamping' operations," he said.

Teams were working on the problem, and he estimated that work would resume Monday morning.

Earlier Saturday, the spokeswoman had said the problems were mainly related to France, and had also affected the company's IT systems.

Renault is the first French company to confirm it has been affected by the attack.

Friday's wave of cyberattacks, which affected dozens of countries, apparently exploited a flaw exposed in documents leaked from the US National Security Agency.

French carmaker Renault is the latest major organisation to be hit by the massive wave of cyberattacks sweeping the globe, the company’s management said on Saturday.

“We have been affected,” a spokeswoman told AFP, saying they were assessing the situation to try to find a solution. “Work is going on since last night. We are doing what is needed to counter this attack,” she added.

Car production was halted in Slovenia after computers at the headquarters of Renault’s subsidiary Revoz in Novo Mesto were affected, a spokeswoman told AFP.

“We can confirm that on Friday, May 12, some problems occurred on certain parts of Revoz’s information system that led to the halting of production during the night,” the spokeswoman said.

Production remained suspended Saturday, she added.

Renault also announced Saturday that the cyberattack had forced it to stop production at sites in France, part of several measures being taken to stop the virus from spreading.

It did not identify the sites, but a union source said the factory at Sandouville in Normandy was one of the main sites affected.

Ransomware: how hackers take your data hostage

Ransomware: how hackers take your data hostage
Simon MALFATTO, Iris de VERICOURT, Jonathan JACOBSEN, AFP

A spokesman at the site, which normally produces about 640 utility vehicles a day, confirmed it had been a victim of the cyberattack.

“Production was affected overnight but luckily there was no full production scheduled for this weekend, only some ‘stamping’ operations,” he said.

Teams were working on the problem, and he estimated that work would resume Monday morning.

Earlier Saturday, the spokeswoman had said the problems were mainly related to France, and had also affected the company’s IT systems.

Renault is the first French company to confirm it has been affected by the attack.

Friday’s wave of cyberattacks, which affected dozens of countries, apparently exploited a flaw exposed in documents leaked from the US National Security Agency.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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