Hacked educational platform partially restored for millions of students
The educational platform Canvas, used by millions globally, experienced a major cyberattack claimed by the hacker group ShinyHunters. The group threatened to leak 3.5 terabytes of stolen student data, including personal information and private messages, if ransoms were not paid by May 12.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedThe educational platform Canvas, used by millions globally, experienced a major cyberattack claimed by the hacker group ShinyHunters. The group threatened to leak 3.5 terabytes of stolen student data, including personal information and private messages, if ransoms were not paid by May 12. The attack caused widespread disruption for students preparing for exams across countries like the United States, Australia, and the UK. Canvas has since been partially restored for most users, though some institutions are still completing necessary checks before full access is granted. The FBI is aware of the service disruption impacting educational institutions.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThe FBI is aware of a service disruption impacting a learning system, though they did not name Canvas.
Canvas has been partially restored for most users following an international cyberattack.
The breach affected millions of students across the United States, Netherlands, Sweden, Australia, and the United Kingdom.
The hacker group ShinyHunters claimed responsibility for crashing the educational platform Canvas and stealing 3.5 terabytes of data.
The cyberattack threatened to leak student data including names, email addresses, student ID numbers, and private messages if ransoms were not paid by May 12.