KY3 in Missouri reports: Ransom notes mysteriously shot out of printers in the Ava School District, demanding money to get information back. The district shut down its network as a precaution. Ava’s Superintendent doesn’t think a Ransomeware attack that hit early Thursday morning got any important data. Read more on KY3. It’s interesting to read…
Category: Malware
Gootkit malware crew left their database exposed online without a password
Catalin Cimpanu reports: The criminal gang behind the Gootkit malware has made the same mistake that thousands of legitimate companies have made before them in the past years — they left MongoDB databases connected to the internet without a password. The leak allowed security researcher Bob Diachenko to download all group’s data and gain an…
The New Target That Enables Ransomware Hackers to Paralyze Dozens of Towns and Businesses at Once
Renee Dudley of ProPublica reports: On July 3, employees at Arbor Dental in Longview, Washington, noticed glitches in their computers and couldn’t view X-rays. Arbor was one of dozens of dental clinics in Oregon and Washington stymied by a ransomware attack that disrupted their business and blocked access to patients’ records. But the hackers didn’t…
Robstown police evidence, reports lost during data breach
Alexandria Rodriguez reports: A data breach resulted in the loss of Robstown Police Department evidence and reports in pending investigations from 2018 and 2019. The Nueces County District Attorney’s Office announced the breach in a news release Friday afternoon on Facebook. Read more on Caller Times.
Wallenpaupack Area School District computers paralyzed in second ransomware attack
Peter Becker reports: The second major cyber attack this calendar year against the computer systems of Wallenpaupack Area School District, led to a shut down of all 3,000 or so computers district-wide. Referred to as a “ransomware” attack in which the perpetrator sends in a virus to lock down the systems and demands money to…
Irish government admits ransomware breach
John Mooney reports: The Department of Communications, Climate Action and the Environment, which is responsible for protecting the state against cyber-attacks, has admitted its IT systems were breached in a ransomware attack last year. Read more on The Times.