The details of more than 600,000 customers were stolen from companies in the UK last year, the Financial Times reported.
The average cost for a Briton’s personal details is 30 dollars (£19.60), a Whitehall security official told the paper.
Profiles have been stolen from the Government’s own computer systems , the paper reported, claiming these hold enough detail to take control of a person’s digital identity.
‘Every company board should be fully aware of the risk from cyber attack, and be confident that the company has proper security in place.’
The Dark Web, described as the internet black market, cannot be accessed with the usual search engines such as Google, instead requiring the use of a covert internet browser called TOR.
Phone and broadband provider TalkTalk was targeted in a cyber attack a week ago, in which it said bank account numbers and sort codes, like those printed on a cheque, may have been accessed.
The company has said criminals would need more information to enable them to take money from a customer’s bank account, adding: ‘Even then, the chances are very small indeed.’
TalkTalk chief executive Dido Harding said she was still unsure how many of the telecoms giant’s four million UK customers had been affected by the attack, which affected its website rather than its ‘core systems’.
Officers, as part of a joint operation between the Met’s cyber crime unit, the PSNI’s cyber crime centre and the National Crime Agency, are investigating a ransom demand sent to the firm by someone claiming to be responsible and seeking payment. The firm said it was not sure if the message was genuine.
A 15-year-old boy arrested in Co Antrim as part of the investigation has been released on bail until a date in November.
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