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Chimera readability score 58 out of 100, Graduate reading level.

After a week of outages, hundreds of millions of students’ data stolen, delayed assignment due dates and school login pages being defaced by hackers, the US tech firm Instructure – which operates the education platform Canvas, used by education providers worldwide – announced it had “reached an agreement with the unauthorised actor” behind the ransomware attack.
Experts read the careful language as a sign that a ransom has been paid. The company has not confirmed this.
The question of whether firms should pay ransomware attackers to regain access to their systems, and potentially prevent further harm from the release of personal information of – in some cases millions – is one that thousands of companies face each year. Although governments across the globe advise against it, many ultimately do.
The hacking group ShinyHunters claimed responsibility for the attack on Instructure. It had threatened to leak the reported 3.6TB of data – comprising of student ID numbers, email addresses, names and messages from 9,000 schools and 275 million students and staff worldwide – unless the company paid the ransom.
In Australia, more than two dozen universities and public and private schools in several states were victims of the attack. RMIT and UTS were among those to grant extensions on assignments as frustrated students were unable to access the portal.
Instructure later confirmed that the hackers had exploited a vulnerability in its Free for Teacher software that allowed them to deface login pages, such as that for the University of Texas San Antonio, to alert users to the breach.
The company said this week that the data had been “returned” to it as part of the agreement it reached with the hackers, and also that it was shown “digital confirmation of data destruction” via shred logs – a technical report that is generated by a program that processes data to be destroyed in a way that makes it no longer recoverable.
“While there is never complete certainty when dealing with cybercriminals, we believe it was important to take every step within our control to give customers additional peace of mind, to the extent possible,” the company said last week.
The head of cyber at cyber forensics accounting firm McGrathNicol, Darren Hopkins, says Canvas’ statement was “well crafted [in a way] that doesn’t necessarily admit anything but also does demonstrate that they’ve got an agreement”.
“ShinyHunters is an extortion group,” he says. “This is what they do. What other agreement will they come up with?”
An Aegis Cybersecurity expert, Luke Irwin, estimates that based on reported ransom demands of US$10m, it’s possible Instructure – or its insurance underwriter – paid somewhere up to that amount but he says it’s also possible it was negotiated down.
“Instructure is dealing with a criminal organisation, and you are taking them at their word that they will commit to those outcomes,” he says. “That is a risk-driven position Instructure needs to work within.”
To pay or not to pay?
Most governments advise against paying ransoms, including in the UK, the US and Australia but outright bans are rare, the tech firm Akamai says in its 2025 ransomware state of the industry report.
“If ransoms are not paid, then the effectiveness of the attack vector is reduced and potentially becomes less attractive to hacker groups,” the report says.
In Australia, it could be a criminal offence to pay an attacker that is designated under the autonomous cyber sanctions law. The sanctions office says it will consider any payment made “on a case-by-case basis” as to whether it is referred for a prosecution.
Payments could fund other criminal activities and ultimately there is no guarantee that paying a ransom or extortion would prevent the release of data or end the threats, Akamai says.
Under Australia’s mandatory reporting obligations that came into effect at the end of May last year, 75 businesses with turnovers of at least $3m a year had paid ransoms as of the end of January 2026.
The government does not disclose how much was paid. A McGrathNichol ransomware report from November surveyed 800 executives from Australian businesses with 50 or more employees and found the average amount paid in Australia was $711,000, down from $1.35m the year before.
The report found 64% had decided to pay a ransom and 81% of businesses said they would hypothetically be willing to pay a ransom.
Hopkins says businesses are getting better at preparing for a cyber-attack, meaning they are less likely to need to pay to get hackers to unlock the locked systems. Instead, businesses were more focused on trying to stop further harm by paying the hackers releasing the data.
“Canvas was interesting because we all suspected [Instructure] engaged with the threat actor very quickly because they were on the leak site and [the posting] got removed from it.”
‘How honest is that criminal?’
The question Hopkins gets asked in boardrooms across Australia, when training businesses on cyber-attacks, is: Will making a payment stop data being exposed?
“That question around ‘how honest is that criminal?’ comes up all the time,” he says.
“The business model [of hackers] needs them to show that they’re honest because no one would ever pay them. So it’s a big trust factor.”
Irwin says it is in ShinyHunters’ interest to act in good faith as an example to other organisations who may be compromised, so future victims would be more inclined to pay.
But Hopkins adds: “You can’t rely on them to not be what they are, which is criminals.
“They’ll go off and give us screenshots saying ‘here’s us deleting things’… you don’t know if they’ve made a copy, or what they’ve done beyond that.
“They will show you what you need to see so you’ll make your payment, and you’ve got no access to validate any of these things.”

Facts Only

* Instructure announced an agreement with the unauthorized actor behind a ransomware attack.
* The attack involved the theft of student data, including ID numbers, email addresses, names, and messages.
* The stolen data comprised information from 9,000 schools and 275 million students and staff worldwide.
* The hacking group ShinyHunters claimed responsibility for the attack on Instructure.
* The hackers threatened to leak the 3.6TB of data unless a ransom was paid.
* Instructure confirmed that the data was returned as part of the agreement.
* Digital confirmation of data destruction was provided via shred logs.
* The hackers exploited a vulnerability in Instructure’s Free for Teacher software to deface login pages.
* More than two dozen universities and schools in Australia were victims of the attack.
* RMIT and UTS granted assignment extensions due to access issues.
* The average amount paid in Australia for ransomware was $711,000.

Executive Summary

Instructure, the provider of the Canvas education platform, reached an agreement with the unauthorized actor behind a ransomware attack that resulted in the theft of student data. The attack involved the theft of 3.6TB of data, including student ID numbers, email addresses, names, and messages from 9,000 schools and 275 million students and staff worldwide. The hackers, identified as ShinyHunters, threatened to leak this data unless a ransom was paid. Instructure confirmed that the data was returned as part of the agreement and that digital confirmation of data destruction was provided via shred logs. The incident affected multiple institutions, including universities in Australia, which experienced delays in assignment access. Experts and cybersecurity specialists debate the ethics of paying ransoms, noting that while governments generally advise against it, many companies ultimately pay. The situation highlights the complex risk assessment involved in responding to large-scale cyber extortion.

Full Take

This incident illustrates the systemic tension between corporate security and criminal extortion, highlighting how the pressure of real-world consequences shapes decision-making regarding cyber payments. The negotiation process, as described by experts, depends heavily on the perceived honesty of the criminal organization, a factor that introduces profound uncertainty regarding the outcome and potential for further harm. The narrative suggests that while governmental and ethical frameworks advise against paying ransoms, the reality for businesses often involves a risk-driven compromise, driven by the immediate need to mitigate severe reputational and operational damage. The hackers’ insistence on demonstrating their actions, even through "shred logs," is a strategic move designed to establish a trust factor, which is leveraged to negotiate larger sums. This dynamic raises critical questions about the accountability of criminal actors and the actual efficacy of paying extortion demands in preventing future data releases or achieving true security. The focus on "how honest is that criminal?" reflects a struggle to assess the integrity of the threat actor against the immediate need for operational recovery.

Sentinel — Human

Confidence

The article is highly credible, featuring nuanced expert analysis and balanced context, indicating a human-written source focused on forensic reporting rather than purely synthesized output.

Signals Detected
low severity: Natural variance in sentence structure and rhetorical emphasis; the flow shifts naturally between reporting facts, quoting experts, and posing philosophical questions.
low severity: The text successfully transitions between specific corporate details, legal/geopolitical context (Australia's laws), and abstract ethical dilemmas without mechanical repetition.
low severity: The attribution of quotes (McGrathNicol, Irwin, Hopkins) and the integration of statistical data (e.g., average payment amounts in Australia) demonstrate typical human journalistic synthesis rather than simple LLM aggregation.
low severity: All specific claims (data volume, names of institutions, expert quotes) appear verifiable and consistent with typical reporting patterns. No egregious confabulation detected.
Human Indicators
The integration of specific, nuanced expert commentary that critiques the actors' motivation (e.g., 'how honest is that criminal?') suggests a human editorial layer.
The structured presentation of varying perspectives (company statement vs. expert opinion vs. legal context) flows logically, reflecting a human attempt at bridging complex topics.
Canvas hack: is it ever a good idea to pay a ransom, and what happens to the data? — Arc Codex