Iranian hackers claim to have obtained files of Iran's 'dirty nuclear projects'

The group advised that in order to keep  personal devices safe, it is preferably to check the attached and downloaded documents in a safe and offline Sandbox/VM.

 Projection of cyber code on hooded man is pictured in this illustration picture (photo credit: REUTERS)
Projection of cyber code on hooded man is pictured in this illustration picture
(photo credit: REUTERS)

Iranian hacker group "Black Reward" announced over the weekend that it had successfully hacked the internal email system of Iran’s Nuclear Power Production and Development Company and that it was releasing 50GB of files to the web.

"We will publish the download links respectively in the next few hours after uploading the information in the online file sharing service anonymously "namely anonfiles," the group wrote on their Instagram channel.

The files include "Raw version and backups related to Iran Atomic Energy Production and Development Company," "Version cleaned and visible in the browser along with about 100 thousand email messages" and "separated and sorted version of documents and information."

The group advised that in order to keep  personal devices safe, it is preferably to check the attached and downloaded documents in a safe and offline Sandbox/VM.

Black Reward threatens Iranian regime 

The group threatened to leak the "dirty nuclear project of the Mullahs’ regime," as it wrote, if it does not release political prisoners and protesters detained during the ongoing nationwide protests across the Islamic Republic within 24 hours.

"24 difficult and important hours for the Islamic Republic started from this moment," the hacker group wrote on Twitter.

Anti-government protests erupted in Iran last month after the death of Mahsa Amini, who was captured by Iran's "modesty police" for wearing a hijab improperly. 

Amnesty International has said security forces killed at least 66 people in a crackdown after Friday prayers in Zahedan, in the southeast, on September 30, some of the deadliest unrest during five weeks of protests ignited by  Amini's death.

This is a developing story.