On Friday morning, University of Pennsylvania alumni, students, staff, and community affiliates received several emails from hackers purporting to represent the universityโs Graduate School of Education (GSE).
โWe have terrible security practices and are completely unmeritocratic,โ read the email. โWe love breaking federal rules like FERPA (all your data will be leaked).โ
This message was sent from a variety of different Penn-affiliated email accounts, such as the GSE, as well as purporting to come from several senior members of staff across the university.
Other Penn affiliates have received the email multiple times from different senders with official @upenn.edu email addresses. (Disclosure: As an alumna and former employee of the university, I have received the message three times thus far to my personal email.)
Penn spokesperson Ron Ozio told TechCrunch in an email on Friday that the schoolโs incident response team is โactively addressingโ the situation.
โA fraudulent email has been circulated that appears to come from the University of Pennsylvaniaโs Graduate School of Education. This is obviously a fake, and nothing in the highly offensive, hurtful message reflects the mission or actions of Penn or of Penn GSE,โ Ozio said.
As the hackers plainly stated in their message (โPlease stop giving us moneyโ), this breach appears motivated to suppress alumni donations. The breach also comes soon after the university publicly rebuffed the White Houseโs offer to make commitments aligned with the Trump administrationโs political agenda in exchange for federal funding. Penn and six other schools have rejected the White Houseโs proposal.
The White Houseโs โCompact for Academic Excellence in Higher Educationโ asks universities to abolish affirmative action in hiring and admissions, and to discipline departments that โpurposefully punish, belittle, and even spark violence against conservative ideas.โ
Compact signatories would also be required to freeze tuition for five years, offer tuition-free education to students pursuing โhard sciences,โ cap international undergrad enrollment at 15%, and require standardized tests like the SAT for admission.
The compact also mandates that schools enforce policies that marginalize transgender and gender non-conforming students.
โ[The compact] preferences and mandates protections for the communication of conservative thought alone,โ wrote Penn president J. Larry Jameson in his response to Secretary of Education Linda McMahon, which was published on the universityโs website.
โOne-sided conditions conflict with the viewpoint diversity and freedom of expression that are central to how universities contribute to democracy and to society,โ wrote Jameson.


