Man charged with Ubiquiti data breach and extortion was employee assigned to investigate hack


A former employee of Ubiquiti Networks has been arrested and charged in connection with a hack that stole gigabytes of data and attempted to extort US $2 million from the firm.

36-year-old Nickolas Sharp, of Portland, Oregon, who was employed by networking manufacturer Ubiquiti as a software engineer in its cloud division between August 2018 and March 2021, is accused of stealing gigabytes of confidential data from the firm’s AWS servers and GitHub repositories in December 2020.

The first the world knew of the security breach was in January 2021, when Ubiquiti advised users to change their account passwords and enable two-factor authentication (2FA).

According to an unsealed Department of Justice indictment against Sharp, the software engineer is said to have used a Surfshark VPN account to hide his IP address when logging into Ubiquiti’s AWS and GitHib accounts in order to steal confidential data.

After the breach, Sharp is said to have posed as an anonymous hacker, demanding a ransom of 50 Bitcoin (approximately worth US $1.9 million at the time) in exchange for the return of the stolen data and details of the vulnerability he allegedly claimed to have exploited to access the company’s systems.

When Ubiquiti refused to pay the ransom, Sharp is alleged to have published a portion of the stolen files online, and attempted to damage the firm’s reputation by contacting the media posing as a whistleblower, maligning its security and causing the business’s share price to fall 20% – a loss in market capitalisation of over US $4 billion.

In short, the US Department of Justice claims that:

  • Sharp took advantage of his privileged access as an employee of Ubiquiti to steal gigabytes of data, and delete logs that could have exposed his identity in a subsequent investigation.
  • Sharp posed as an anonymous hacker to demand a ransom worth almost US $2 million be paid.
  • Sharp anonymously contacted media outlets with damaging news stories about how Ubiquiti had handled the data breach, claiming a vulnerability was present in its systems.

In perhaps the ultimate irony, Sharp was assigned to the company’s incident response team investigating the hack – Ubiquiti clearly unaware at the time of his alleged…

Source…