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Jeremy Clarkson leads farmers’ demands to scrap ‘bureaucratic bulldozer’ red tape

 Letter signed by almost 5,000 rural voters sent to Liz Truss amid attacks from conservation charities on environmental policiesJeremy Clarkson and Lord Botham are leading farmers who are demanding to be freed from a "bureaucratic bulldozer" of red tape in the countryside.






Russian-based hackers have allegedly posted the details of celebrity customers such as Jeremy Clarkson and Sir David Attenborough on the dark web after trying to blackmail Britain's poshest farm shop. Cotswold firm Daylesford Organic have said to have been targeted by a group named Snatch after the Guy Ritchie movie which has a cult following.The Gloucestershire firm dubbed Britain's poshest farm shop has been targeted by the hackers who use cyber "brute-force" to infiltrate company networks and then secretly collect data. Companies in America, Canada and Europe have been targeted by Snatch and the ransomware attacks usually came some time after the original breach.


Now the Gloucestershire company, which also has four satellite shops in London and an online business, is said to have become the latest victim of the gang which is named after the 2000 movie starring Jason Statham and set in London's criminal underworld. Around 80 gigabytes of stolen files have said to have been uploaded to the dark web after Daylesford refused to pay the ransom in Bitcoin say the MoS.The company is owned by influential Lady Carole Bamford, wife of JCB billionaire Lord Bamford. The Tory donors recently hosted former Prime Minister Boris Johnson's wedding to Carrie Symonds at their Cotswold home, Daylesford House. Although he had Daylesford deliveries to Number Ten during the pandemic, Mr Johnson's details have not been released onto the dark web according to the report.


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