Cyber correspondent, BBC World Service

An abusive e-mail despatched by the Marks & Spencer hackers to the retailer’s boss gloating in regards to the hack and demanding cost has been seen by the BBC.
The message to M&S CEO Stuart Machin – which was in damaged English – was despatched on the 23 April from the hacker group known as DragonForce utilizing the e-mail account of an worker.
The e-mail confirms for the primary time that M&S has been hacked by the ransomware group – one thing that M&S has up to now refused to acknowledge.
“We’ve marched the methods from China all the way in which to the UK and have mercilessly raped your organization and encrypted all of the servers,” the hackers wrote.
“The dragon desires to talk to you so please head over to [our darknet website].”
The extortion e-mail was proven to the BBC by a cyber-security professional.
The blackmail message, which incorporates the n-word, was despatched to the M&S CEO and 7 different executives.
In addition to bragging about putting in ransomware throughout the M&S IT system to render it ineffective, the hackers say they’ve stolen the personal knowledge of hundreds of thousands of shoppers.
Practically three weeks later customers were informed by the corporate that their knowledge could have been stolen.
The e-mail was despatched apparently utilizing the account of an worker from the Indian IT large Tata Consultancy Companies (TCS) – which has supplied IT providers to M&S for over a decade.
The Indian IT employee based mostly in London has an M&S e-mail tackle however is a paid TCS worker.
It seems as if he himself was hacked within the assault.
TCS has beforehand mentioned it is investigating whether or not it was the gateway for the cyber-attack.
The corporate has advised the BBC that the e-mail was not despatched from its system and that it has nothing to do with the breach at M&S.
M&S has declined to remark solely.
‘We are able to each assist one another’
A darknet hyperlink shared within the extortion e-mail connects to a portal for DragonForce victims to start negotiating the ransom price. That is additional indication that the e-mail is genuine.
Sharing the hyperlink – the hackers wrote: “let’s get the occasion began. Message us, we are going to make this quick and straightforward for us.”
The criminals additionally seem to have particulars in regards to the firm’s cyber-insurance coverage too saying “we all know we will each assist one another handsomely : ))”.
The M&S CEO has refused to say if the corporate has paid a ransom to the hackers.
DragonForce ended the e-mail with a picture of a dragon respiration hearth.

The e-mail confirms for the primary time the hyperlink between M&S’s hack and the ongoing Co-op cyber-attack, which DragonForce have additionally claimed duty for.
The 2 hacks – which started in late April – have wrought havoc on the 2 retailers. Some Co-op cabinets had been left naked for weeks, whereas M&S expects its operations to be disrupted till July.
Though we now know that DragonForce is behind each, it’s nonetheless not clear who the precise hackers are.
DragonForce affords cyber-criminal associates varied providers on their darknet web site in alternate for a 20% reduce of any ransoms collected.
Anybody can enroll and use their malicious software program to scramble a sufferer’s knowledge or use their darknet web site for his or her public extortion.
Nothing has appeared on the prison’s darknet leak web site about both Co-op or M&S however the hackers advised the BBC final week that they had been having IT issued of their very own and could be posting data “very quickly.”
Some researchers say DragonForce are based mostly in Malaysia, whereas others say Russia. Their e-mail to M&S implies that they’re from China.
Hypothesis has been mounting {that a} unfastened collective of younger western hackers often known as Scattered Spider could be the associates behind the hacks and in addition one on Harrods.
Scattered Spider just isn’t actually a gaggle within the regular sense of the phrase. It is extra of a group which organises throughout websites like Discord, Telegram and boards – therefore the outline “scattered” which was given to them by cyber-security researchers at CrowdStrike.
Some Scattered Spider hackers are identified to be youngsters within the US and UK.
The UK’s Nationwide Crime Company mentioned in a BBC documentary in regards to the retail hacks, that they’re focusing investigations on the group.
The BBC spoke to the Co-op hackers who declined to reply whether or not or not they had been Scattered Spider. “We can’t reply that query” is all they mentioned.
Two of them mentioned they wished to be often known as “Raymond Reddington” and “Dembe Zuma” after characters from US crime thriller The Blacklist which entails a wished prison serving to police take down different criminals on a blacklist.
In a message to me, they boasted: “We’re placing UK retailers on the Blacklist.”
There have been a collection of smaller cyber-attacks on UK retailers since however none as impactful of disruptive as these on Co-op, M&S and Harrods.
Within the early levels of the M&S hack, unknown sources advised cyber information web site Bleeping Laptop that proof is pointing to Scattered Spider.
The UK’s national cyber-crime unit has confirmed to the BBC that the group is one in every of their key suspects.
As for the hackers I spoke to on Telegram, they declined to reply whether or not or not they had been Scattered Spider. “We can’t reply that query” is all they mentioned.
