Colombia’s Ecopetrol says cyberattack stole data tied to 3,300 accounts

July 18 (Reuters) – Colombian state-controlled ‌energy company Ecopetrol said on Friday a cyberattack resulted in the theft of data tied to about 3,300 user accounts ​and that it could not “guarantee” the breach would ​not have a “material adverse” financial impact.
The company, however, ⁠said it had not identified any critical disruption ​to its operations, production capacity or any direct financial ​impact as of Friday, and that no stolen data had yet been disclosed by the hacker.
Ecopetrol is one of Latin America’s ​largest energy producers and Colombia’s largest company, accounting ​for more than 60% of the country’s hydrocarbon production.
Ecopetrol said ‌the ⁠hacker had not been identified but had communicated extortion demands to the company and threatened to publicly disclose the hacked information.
The data breach affected cloud-based file ​storage environments of ​15 subsidiaries, ⁠including Ecopetrol itself, the energy firm said, adding that it was able to ​prevent an attempted ransomware attack.
The company said ​it ⁠was continuing to assess potential exposure, which could include confidential, proprietary or personal data, and warned the incident ⁠could ​have a material adverse effect ​on its business, reputation, operating results or financial condition.

Reporting by Preetika Parashuraman ​and Shubham Kalia in Bengaluru; Editing by Sam Holmes.

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