Property registrations and citizen services in Karnataka have been severely affected since Monday due to a large-scale cyberattack on the Kaveri 2.0 portal. Initially suspected to be a technical glitch, the Revenue and E-Governance Departments have now confirmed that the disruptions are the result of a “motivated Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack.”
The Kaveri 2.0 portal, introduced in 2023 to streamline property registration and related services, has been facing issues since January 13, 2025, with attackers consistently exploiting vulnerabilities despite repeated fixes. Revenue Minister Krishna Byre Gowda stated that the evolving nature of these disruptions indicates a deliberate and sustained attempt to cripple the system.
Officials revealed that bots are being used to conduct excessive searches for encumbrance certificates (ECs) through customer logins, overloading the system and causing it to crash. Even as authorities address certain weaknesses, attackers appear to be adapting in real-time to exploit new loopholes.
For instance, on Monday, the system was restored by 1 p.m. after a complete outage, but it was down again by 3 p.m. The attack has had a severe impact on property registrations across the state, with daily registrations plummeting from an average of over 8,000 to just over 500 on Tuesday.
Thousands of property transactions have been postponed indefinitely due to the disruption, leaving buyers and sellers in a state of uncertainty. Many users have been unable to log into the portal or upload necessary documents, causing widespread frustration.
K.V. Govardhan of Arna Estates, who had registrations scheduled in Bagepalli and Banaswadi on Monday, expressed concerns over the lack of clarity on when the system would be fully restored.