Thursday, June 25, 2026
ADVT 
National

CRA website remains limited after hack

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Sep, 2020 06:55 PM
  • CRA website remains limited after hack

More than a month after the Canada Revenue Agency took its website offline in the wake of a major cyberattack, the federal tax collection agency won't say when it expects its online services to fully return to normal.

A number of services within the CRA's online portal for individual Canadians remain unavailable, including the ability to manage direct deposit information, change an address or authorize a representative.

Links with Service Canada accounts have also been deactivated.

The CRA is "working diligently to restore access to all services as quickly as possible," spokeswoman Sylvie Branch wrote in an email.

But the CRA won't say when it expects that to be, only that a "forensic analysis related to the recent cyber incidents continues."

The CRA has found suspicious activity on around 48,000 accounts after the two "credential stuffing" attacks in June and August, which took advantage of the fact that many people use the same log-in credentials for multiple services, the Treasury Board of Canada said earlier this month.

Jose Manuel Fernandez, a professor at Montreal's Polytechnique university who teaches about computer security, said it can take time to investigate cyberattacks and fix vulnerabilities.

"These systems are very complex," he said. "The industry as a whole has a terrible track record of building software that is reliable and free from bugs that can be exploited."

He said it's common for organizations to limit access to certain services while they're investigating, comparing it to the yellow police tape around a crime scene.

An organization like the CRA may also limit users' ability to make certain changes to reduce the risk of stolen information being used for fraud.

The CRA said the COVID-19 pandemic is not slowing its response.

"The fact that many CRA employees are working from home is not affecting the CRA's ability to return its online services to full functionality," Branch said.

MORE National ARTICLES

Federal Books Show $500m Shortfall In First Quarter Of 2019-20 Fiscal Year

Federal Books Show $500m Shortfall In First Quarter Of 2019-20 Fiscal Year
The Finance Department's fiscal monitor says the combined shortfall for the April-to-June stretch came as growth in program spending and debt-servicing costs outpaced an increase in revenue.    

Federal Books Show $500m Shortfall In First Quarter Of 2019-20 Fiscal Year

Stephen Harper Fundraising Pitch Used To Raise Money, For Liberals

The Conservatives posted a video Thursday of Harper urging supporters to kick in money to help make his successor, Andrew Scheer, "the next prime minister of Canada."    

Stephen Harper Fundraising Pitch Used To Raise Money, For Liberals

Scheer's Position On Abortion A Shift, But Not A Surprise To Some Conservatives

Scheer's Position On Abortion A Shift, But Not A Surprise To Some Conservatives
OTTAWA - One of Conservative leader Andrew Scheer's main challengers during the party's leadership race says if Scheer had been clear at the time on how he'd handle abortion debates, he might never have won.

Scheer's Position On Abortion A Shift, But Not A Surprise To Some Conservatives

Airbus Pulls Out Of Fighter-Jet Competition Following Complaints

Airbus Pulls Out Of Fighter-Jet Competition Following Complaints
OTTAWA - Canada's multibillion-dollar effort to buy new fighter jets has taken another surprise turn with European aerospace giant Airbus announcing it has withdrawn from the high-stakes competition.    

Airbus Pulls Out Of Fighter-Jet Competition Following Complaints

Infant Remains Stuffed In Cardboard Box; Funeral Company Loses Licence

TORONTO - A company in southwestern Ontario has lost its bid to keep its licence to transfer corpses after a contractor stuffed an infant's remains into a cardboard box.

Infant Remains Stuffed In Cardboard Box; Funeral Company Loses Licence

Landmark Calgary Tower Still Closed Seven Weeks After Elevator Scare

CALGARY - One of Calgary's most recognizable landmarks remains closed seven weeks after an elevator with eight people on board plunged several floors.    

Landmark Calgary Tower Still Closed Seven Weeks After Elevator Scare