A Florida city's council voted to pay a ransom of $600,000 in Bitcoin to hackers that targeted its computer systems — and the payout is a sign of how unprepared much of the US is to deal with a coming wave of cyber attacks.
The city council of Riviera Beach, 50 miles north of Fort Lauderdale, voted on Monday to meet the demands of their hackers in the hope of getting back their compromised data, CBS News reported.
According to The Palm Beach Post, the attack began on May 29, when a employee from the police department opened an email attachment that contained malware. The software quickly spread through the city's computer systems, affecting its email system and even the 911 dispatch operations.
The New York Times reported that the hackers demanded their ransom in bitcoin. The paper noted that there is no guarantee that hackers will honor their end of the deal after getting the money. CBS reported that the council already voted to spend $1 million on new computers after the attack.
Also at CNN.
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(Score: 2) by All Your Lawn Are Belong To Us on Friday June 21 2019, @02:16PM
OK, gotcha now. I can understand that and we do get stupid about things (like hatred of 'cyber' for myself). But sometimes the question might be, "Is it needful to make any such reference or just note the specific type of crime and not need to specify that it's an Internet crime?" Especially when context should make it clear, anyway. Why say "pirate" or "filesharing" if the offense is "copyright infringement" and the story makes it clear that it was by filesharing? But don't take that as a criticism per se.
This sig for rent.