A farmer from Hagendorn near Cham in the canton of Zug in Switzerland has fallen victim to a cyberattack in which unknown culprits hacked his milking robot. The cyber criminals then encrypted the stored data. The criminals ultimately demanded a ransom of 10,000 dollars for the decryption of the data. However, because the farmer did not pay, he lost access to important information. As a result, he had to euthanize one of his pregnant cows due to complications related to pregnancy. The financial damage is estimated at about 6,400 euros. To this day, it is unclear who is behind this cyberattack.

The encrypted data included, among other things, information about the cows’ pregnancies. The farmer told the Luzerner Zeitung that the animal might still be alive if he had been able to read the exact insemination date from the milking robot. As a result, the hack directly led to the cow’s death.

24 points

Better headline: Swiss cheese security at dairy farm results in hackers trying to milk them for all they’re worth.

permalink
report
reply
17 points

Why was the cow connected to the Internet in the first place. Airgap your cows, people.

permalink
report
reply
15 points

Swiss cow dies is killed after cyber attack.

permalink
report
reply
6 points

s/after/due to

While your point is correct. Your statement removes all responsibility from the hackers. When cause and effect are still related.

permalink
report
parent
reply
5 points

Why does a cow’s life depend on a robot?

permalink
report
parent
reply
9 points

This article is so stupid. The cow did not die due to a cyber attack. Cows get pregnant and have births all over the world regardless of data in a milking machine.

permalink
report
reply
8 points

remember everyone, backup your cow pregnancy data!

permalink
report
reply

And Finally...

!andfinally@feddit.uk

Create post

A place for odd or quirky world news stories.

Elsewhere in the Fediverse:

Rules:

  • Be excellent to each other
  • The Internet will resurface old “And finally…” material. Just mark it [VINTAGE]

Community stats

  • 2.2K

    Monthly active users

  • 720

    Posts

  • 5.9K

    Comments