University of Maastricht says it paid hackers 200,000-euro ransom
Ransomware attacks have become commonplace
Rep image. PHOTO: AFP
AMSTERDAM:
The University of Maastricht on Wednesday disclosed that it had paid hackers a ransom of 30 bitcoin — at the time worth 200,000 euros $220,000 — to unblock its computer systems, including email and computers, after an attack that unfolded on December 24.
Chilling video released of hacker talking through smart camera
Ransomware attacks have become commonplace, with insurers raising cybersecurity premiums by as much as 25% after hacker targets in 2019 included companies, hospitals, and airports.
University Vice President Nick Bos said the university had decided to pay the ransom after considering the alternatives, which would have included rebuilding its entire IT network from scratch.
“The damage of that to the work of the students, scientists, staff, as well as the continuity of the institution, can scarcely be conceived,” he said.
Hacker used $35 computer to steal NASA data
Bos was speaking at a press conference to disclose what the university knew about the hack, including that the initial breach had resulted from an unidentified staff member clicking on a phishing e-mail a month earlier.
Cybersecurity firm Fox-IT, which helped the university recover and analyze what happened, identified the hackers as TA505, a Russian-speaking criminal group.
The University of Maastricht on Wednesday disclosed that it had paid hackers a ransom of 30 bitcoin — at the time worth 200,000 euros $220,000 — to unblock its computer systems, including email and computers, after an attack that unfolded on December 24.
Chilling video released of hacker talking through smart camera
Ransomware attacks have become commonplace, with insurers raising cybersecurity premiums by as much as 25% after hacker targets in 2019 included companies, hospitals, and airports.
University Vice President Nick Bos said the university had decided to pay the ransom after considering the alternatives, which would have included rebuilding its entire IT network from scratch.
“The damage of that to the work of the students, scientists, staff, as well as the continuity of the institution, can scarcely be conceived,” he said.
Hacker used $35 computer to steal NASA data
Bos was speaking at a press conference to disclose what the university knew about the hack, including that the initial breach had resulted from an unidentified staff member clicking on a phishing e-mail a month earlier.
Cybersecurity firm Fox-IT, which helped the university recover and analyze what happened, identified the hackers as TA505, a Russian-speaking criminal group.