MIAMI — The
leaders of Riviera Beach, Fla., looking weary, met quietly this week for
an extraordinary vote to pay nearly $600,000 in ransom to hackers who
paralyzed the city’s computer systems.
Riviera
Beach, a small city of about 35,000 people just north of West Palm
Beach, became the latest government to be crippled by ransomware attacks
that have successfully extorted municipalities and forced them to dig
into public coffers to restore their networks. A similar breach recently
cost Baltimore $18 million to repair damages.
Even
large cities, however, have had to pay smaller ransoms than Riviera
Beach. On Monday, the City Council unanimously agreed to have its
insurance carrier pay the hackers 65 Bitcoin, a hard-to-trace digital
currency, amounting to about $592,000. By making the payment, the City
Council hopes to regain access to data encrypted in the cyberattack
three weeks ago, though there is no guarantee the hackers will release
the data once payment is received.
Rose
Anne Brown, a city spokeswoman, said on Wednesday that Riviera Beach
was working with law enforcement, which does not typically endorse
making ransom payments, and with security consultants, who sometimes do
as a way for their clients to recoup years of valuable information.
1 comment:
I have got to learn how to hack computers.
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