Data Breaches

Library of Congress Says an Adversary Hacked Some Emails

The Library of Congress has notified lawmakers of a “cyber breach” of its IT system by an adversary and a hack of emails.

The Library of Congress has notified lawmakers of a “cyber breach” of its IT system by an adversary and a hack of emails.

The Library of Congress has notified lawmakers of a “cyber breach” of its IT system by an adversary, a hack of emails between some congressional offices and library staff, according to an email obtained by The Associated Press.

The library said that an adversary accessed email communications during the period from January to September.

The matter has been referred to law enforcement, the library said. Authorities gave no immediate information on the attacker, including whether their identity was known.

“The Library has mitigated the vulnerability that the adversary used to access the environment and has taken measures to prevent such incidents in the future,” the library said in the notification.

NBC News first reported the breach.

The Library of Congress operates across from the U.S. Capitol within the complex grounds. It is the largest library in the world, according to its website, and it holds “millions of books, films and video, audio recordings, photographs, newspapers, maps and manuscripts in its collections.”

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

The Library is also the main research arm of Congress, and the home of the U.S. Copyright Office.

In the notification about the breach, the library noted that the House and Senate’s information technology networks, “including individual House and Senate email accounts, were not compromised in any way.”

It said “an adversary accessed email communications between congressional offices and some Library staff, including the Congressional Research Service, compromising the information obtained in those emails.”

The notifications said the U.S. Copyright Office systems were not impacted by the breach.

The library said it is in the process of analyzing which email communications were accessed and would contact specific congressional offices and staff members with more information.

Related: Details and Lessons Learned From the Ransomware Attack on the British Library

Related: Ransomware Attack Disrupts Seattle Public Library Services

Related Content

Data Breaches

HackerOne, Huntress, Jamf, OneTrust, Recorded Future, Snyk, and Tanium are among the affected Klue customers.

Data Breaches

Hackers stole personal information after breaching the systems of a third-party license vendor serving TPWD.

Data Breaches

Kodak told SecurityWeek it believes there is no threat to its systems or operations as a result of the cybersecurity incident.

Data Breaches

The digital health company said it learned of the breach on June 8 and the attackers demanded a ransom.

Data Breaches

The hack-and-leak group FulcrumSec claims to have stolen 1.3TB of data from the pharmaceutical giant.

Data Breaches

The pharmaceutical giant says the attackers gained access to personal data stored on the compromised systems. 

Data Breaches

French officials say roughly 73,000 government accounts were affected, while the threat actor claims to have stolen messages and user data from the sovereign...

Data Breaches

The extortion group threatens to leak 297 GB of data allegedly stolen from the Council of Europe, including employee personal information.

Copyright © 2026 SecurityWeek ®, a Wired Business Media Publication. All Rights Reserved.

Exit mobile version