Blackbaud to Pay $3M Fine for 'Misleading' Customers Following 2020 Ransomware Attack, Data Breach

Blackbaud, a South Carolina-based provider of administrative, donor management, and CRM software to thousands of K–12 private schools, higher education institutions, and nonprofits, has been ordered by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to pay a fine of $3 million to “settle charges for making misleading disclosures about a 2020 ransomware attack that impacted more than 13,000 customers,” the federal agency said in a news release.

The SEC order said that during the ransomware attack, bank account information and Social Security numbers of donors stored by Blackbaud customers were stolen by the attackers, but Blackbaud had told customers the opposite and subsequently omitted the information in quarterly filings with the SEC. 

“On July 16, 2020, Blackbaud announced that the ransomware attacker did not access donor bank account information or Social Security numbers. Within days of these statements, however, the company’s technology and customer relations personnel learned that the attacker had in fact accessed and exfiltrated this sensitive information,” said the SEC order. “These employees did not communicate this information to senior management responsible for its public disclosure because the company failed to maintain disclosure controls and procedures.” 

In its August 2020 quarterly report filed with the SEC, Blackbaud “omitted this material information about the scope of the attack and misleadingly characterized the risk of an attacker obtaining such sensitive donor information as hypothetical,” the agency said.

“Public companies have an obligation to provide their investors with accurate and timely material information; Blackbaud failed to do so,” said David Hirsch, chief of the SEC Enforcement Division’s Crypto Assets and Cyber Unit. 

The agency ruled that Blackbaud violated two sections of the Securities Act of 1933 and one section of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 as well as Rules 12b-20, 13a-13, and 13a-15(a). 

“Without admitting or denying the SEC’s findings, Blackbaud agreed to cease and desist from committing violations of these provisions” and to pay the fine of $3 million, the agency said.

According to its website, Blackbaud provides cloud-based software for education and nonprofit fundraising and donor relationship management, enrollment, finance, grants and awards, and marketing management. 

Its education customer base includes “24 of 25 top private U.S. colleges as ranked by Forbes,” the Blackbaud website says, and its software powers “93% of higher education institutions with billion-dollar campaigns.” Major universities using its donor management and CRM software include University of Georgia, Notre Dame, University of Louisville, and California State University Long Beach, according to Blackbaud.com.

 

 

About the Author

Kristal Kuykendall is editor, 1105 Media Education Group. She can be reached at [email protected].


Featured

  • digital data protection and cyber security

    White House Launches New AI Security Framework

    President Donald Trump has issued a new executive order aimed at maintaining United States AI leadership while addressing the security risks posed by increasingly powerful AI systems.

  • person typing on a touch screen schedule plan calendar

    DOJ Extends Deadline for ADA Title II Compliance

    Institutions working to meet the Americans with Disabilities Act Title II regulations for digital accessibility have received a temporary reprieve: The United States Department of Justice has published an interim final rule to push back the compliance deadline by one year.

  • abstract representation of artificial intelligence with data streams and circuits

    New Anthropic Institute to Study Risks and Economic Effects of Advanced AI

    Anthropic has announced the Anthropic Institute, a new research effort focused on the biggest societal challenges posed by more powerful AI systems.

  • Neon blue security locks with a single red highlight

    AI Shifts Cybersecurity Focus from Finding Flaws to Fixing Them

    For decades, one of cybersecurity's most difficult challenges has been finding vulnerabilities before attackers do. A growing number of security professionals now say artificial intelligence is changing that equation, shifting the focus from discovering flaws to fixing them quickly enough to prevent exploitation.