Instructure confirms hackers used Canvas flaw to deface portals
Instructure confirms XSS vulnerabilities allowed hackers to deface Canvas portals and extort ransom.
Summary
Instructure disclosed that cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities in its Canvas learning management system enabled attackers to compromise authenticated admin sessions and deface login portals with extortion messages. The threat actor ShinyHunters exploited the same flaws twice—first to steal 3.6TB of data from 8,809 educational organizations, then to demand ransom by defacing Canvas portals with a May 12 payment deadline. The breach potentially impacts 275 million student, teacher, and staff records across schools and universities worldwide.
Full text
Instructure confirms hackers used Canvas flaw to deface portals By Ionut Ilascu May 11, 2026 11:26 AM 0 Education technology giant Instructure has confirmed that a security vulnerability allowed hackers to modify Canvas login portals and leave an extortion message. BleepingComputer has learned that both the breach and defacements involved multiple cross-site scripting (XSS) vulnerabilities that enabled the attacker to obtain authenticated admin sessions. The second hack was to draw attention and to pressure Instructure into entering negotiations to pay a ransom following an initial breach disclosed a week before. Instructure is the developer of Canvas, a popular learning management system (LMS) used by schools and universities around the world to handle assignments and coursework. On April 29, the company discovered that its network had been breached and “immediately revoked the unauthorized party’s access, started an investigation, and engaged outside forensic experts.” A few days later, the company confirmed that data was stolen in the cyberattack, and ShinyHunters published Instructure on their data leak site, stating that they stole more than 3.6 terabytes of uncompressed data. In an attempt to coerce Instructure into paying a ransom, the threat actor hacked Instructure again on May 7 using the same vulnerability used in the initial intrusion. ShinyHunters injected malicious JavaScript exploiting XSS bugs within user-generated content features, which gave them access to authenticated admin sessions and allowed them to perform privileged actions. In an email to BleepingComputer on Sunday, Instructure confirmed that the exploited security issue affected the Free-for-Teacher environment, the free, limited version of Canvas LMS for individual educators. “The unauthorized actor made changes to the pages that appeared when some students and teachers were logged in through Canvas” - Instructure At the time, the organization added that it temporarily took Canvas offline to prevent the malicious activity from spreading, determine the cause, and to “apply additional safeguards.” ShinyHunters used the flaw to add a message to Canvas login portals, warning that the company, as well as schools using its platform, had until May 12 to reach out and negotiate a ransom. Hackers' message on the Canvas login page of the University of Texas San Antonio Instructure has shut down Free-For-Teacher accounts until the issues have been resolved. However, Canvas has been restored and is available for use since May 9th. While no data was compromised when defacing Canvas login portals, the data that ShinyHunters exfiltrated in the first breach likely includes usernames, email addresses, course names, enrollment information, and messages. According to ShinyHunters, the Instructure breach impacts 8,809 educational organizations (schools, universities, colleges, online platforms) and the hackers claim to have stolen 275 million records belonging to students, teachers, and other staff members. 99% of What Mythos Found Is Still Unpatched. AI chained four zero-days into one exploit that bypassed both renderer and OS sandboxes. A wave of new exploits is coming.At the Autonomous Validation Summit (May 12 & 14), see how autonomous, context-rich validation finds what's exploitable, proves controls hold, and closes the remediation loop. Claim Your Spot Related Articles: Canvas login portals hacked in mass ShinyHunters extortion campaignInstructure confirms data breach, ShinyHunters claims attackInstructure hacker claims data theft from 8,800 schools, universitiesInfinite Campus warns of breach after ShinyHunters claims data theftEdu tech firm Instructure discloses cyber incident, probes impact