The British Library cyber breach was an attack on the world’s knowledge

Nilanjana Roy

On October 29 last year, the British Library in London posted on X saying that the institution was struggling with “technical issues”. As these continued day after day, it became clearer to the library’s readers and thousands of scholars what had actually happened: the BL had fallen prey to a massive cyber attack, carried out by a criminal group that has become notorious for such things. 

The BL holds something like 170mn items; essential digital archives, entire collections of texts and images and access to online learning resources were severely disrupted. Librarians and readers could no longer retrieve books, and after the BL declined to pay the ransom that had been demanded, the attackers dumped enormous quantities of employees’ personal data on to the dark web. 

Six weeks later, the BL’s chief executive Roly Keating wrote in a blog post: “The people responsible for this cyber attack stand against everything that libraries represent: openness, empowerment, and access to knowledge.”