- Last week, Globalx Anonymous website did
- The hacktivists said that Globalx had been targeted to expel illegal foreigners
- The company has now reported the violation of the dry
Globalx, an American airline involved in the expulsion by the Trump administration of illegal foreigners from the United States in Salvador, Venezuela and elsewhere, confirmed a cyber attack earlier this month.
In a new 8-K form filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) of the United States, Globalx declared that it “had learned unauthorized activity in its computer networks and its support systems of its commercial applications”, on May 5, 2025. The company replied by activating its incident response protocol and providing third-party cybersecurity experts to help with content and Mitigation. He also started investigating the nature and scope of the incident, and “took measures” to contain and isolate affected servers. The police were also informed.
Globalx says he is currently investigating the attack, but believes that none of his operations has been disrupted or negatively affected. The company does not expect the incident to have a material effect, he concluded.
Anon strikes
Last week, 404 Media reported that Globalx had been attacked by Hacktivist Anonymous, who degraded the company’s home page and allegedly stolen from sensitive data. They left a message on the home page, saying that they “decided to apply the judge’s order because you and your Sycophant staff ignore the legitimate orders that go against your fascist plans.”
They referred to several court decisions which confirmed that some of the flights should not have been expelled in Salvador and who ordered the Trump administration to bring these people.
As for stolen files, the media reported that Anonymous had apparently seized theft files and passenger manifests for all customers, illegal immigrants included. This was not confirmed, however.
The group shared information with certain media members on their own initiative, added 404 media, also saying that the information could be used to provide “a granular overview of which was expelled exactly on global flights, when and where”.
Via The register