ଓଡ଼ିଆ | ENGLISH
ଓଡ଼ିଆ | ENGLISH

Cybersecurity team saves CBSE portal as hackers trigger 1.5 million fake hits in two minutes

Hackers failed to disrupt the Central Board of Secondary Education website despite flooding the network with 1.5 million fake hits in a few minutes. Security layers successfully blocked the automated traffic while keeping services open for thousands of students
Published By : Satya Mohapatra | June 2, 2026 6:45 PM
Cybersecurity team saves CBSE portal as hackers trigger 1.5 million fake hits in two minutes

Cybersecurity team blocks massive online assault on student platform

Malicious actors launched a coordinated digital assault against the national school board online network today, trying to knock the system offline during peak student traffic. Central Board of Secondary Education officials reported that their servers handled a staggering 1.5 million fake web requests within a brief two-minute window. Security filters also detected and stopped over one hundred thousand separate attempts to gain illegal access to internal database files.

Despite the intensity of this digital siege, structural defenses successfully isolated the malicious traffic. The network kept working normally right from its 7 am launch. Over 18,000 students living across various regions, including hundreds from coastal Odisha districts like Khordha and Cuttack, completed their verification requests by mid-afternoon. Internal dashboards showed the platform smoothly managing over 8,000 active users at the exact same moment.

Technical administrators had recently upgraded the portal network based on feedback from schools. These revisions included stretching the time limits for user sessions so students do not get logged out while uploading their documents. Security personnel also integrated Aadhaar verification into the initial sign-in page to ensure only genuine applicants gain entrance. This defensive layer acts as a shield against automated bot networks trying to flood the system.

This incident reflects a rising trend where public infrastructure networks face continuous digital interference during high-profile events. Board technical teams remain on high alert, running continuous checks to keep the digital space safe. Students can continue to use the web service to request marks verification without worrying about data safety.