
Treasured exhibits have reportedly been moved to safety at Florence's world-famous Uffizi Gallery following a cyberattack earlier this year.
According to a report published on Friday in the Corriere della Sera daily, the unknown perpetrators have already attempted to use the stolen data to extort money from the museum in northern Italy.
The museum – which attracts more than 5 million visitors a year – has sealed some doorways and emergency exits, the newspaper reported.
In many museums around the world, fears of break-ins have been high since the spectacular heist at the Louvre in Paris, where part of the French crown jewels were stolen in October last year.
Investigative circles suggest hackers have repeatedly managed to breach the Uffizi’s internal database since February.
In the process, they gained access not only to passwords and login details for the photo archive but also to detailed floor plans and the locations of surveillance cameras.
The Corriere della Sera report said valuable items from the treasury of the Grand Dukes of Tuscany have been moved from the Uffizi to a vault in the Banca d'Italia.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Crime boss Steven Lyons set to be deported from Bali to Spain - 2
What's your #1 tone - 3
Broken toilet, T-shirts on windows and collecting saliva: The weirdness of daily life aboard Orion - 4
Figure out How to Reveal Stowed away Open Record Rewards - 5
New movies to watch this weekend: See 'The Running Man' in theaters, rent 'One Battle After Another,' stream 'Nobody 2' on Peacock
Jesse Jackson hospitalized, under observation for a neurodegenerative condition
Upgrading the Healthy benefit of Your Local Vegetables
Family-Accommodating Snow Sports Experiences
Step by step instructions to Contrast Lab Jewels and Regular Ones
Artemis 2 moon rocket gets 'America 250' paint job | Space photo of the day for Dec. 23, 2025
Watch This Glacier Race into the Sea
A24's 'Backrooms' trailer shows endless fluorescent-lit spaces and terrifying mannequins melting into the floor
Australian State Triggers Emergency Powers Amid Fuel Crisis
Consumers advised to dispose of 19 cooking pans due to lead leaching risk, FDA reports












