When Hackers Turn to Blackmail

By: Material type: ArticleArticleLanguage: ENG Series: ; 4Publication details: Oct 2009 0Edition: 10Description: 19-26 PpSubject(s): DDC classification:
  •  Eis
Online resources: Summary: Sunnylake Hospital is being held up by online extortionists who have blocked access to its electronic medical records and are demanding $100,000 to restore it. Paul Layman, Sunnylake's CEO, didn't take their first e-mail seriously, and now the hospital has ground to a halt. Paul's golden-boy IT director can't seem to outwit the hackers. Sunnylake's legal counsel tells Paul, "Literally every second is a liability." The chief of staff is in a mutinous fury. What should Paul do? He should pay the extortionists, advises Per Gullestrup, the CEO of Clipper Projects, who in late 2008 was closely involved in negotiations with Somali pirates who had seized a Clipper Group ship. But first Paul should hire a negotiator to prevent the extortionists from doing further mischief. He should absolutely not acquiesce, says Richard L. Nolan, a professor at the University of Washington's Michael G. Foster School of Business, because the hackers may have embedded further corruption in the system. And Paul must communicate fully with the staff, his board, patients, and the public. Peter R. Stephenson, chairman of the department of computing at Norwich University, recommends shutting down the servers, running a malware scan on every workstation in the hospital, and watching what happens for 24 hours, in case the extortionists are insiders.
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Sunnylake Hospital is being held up by online extortionists who have blocked access to its electronic medical records and are demanding $100,000 to restore it. Paul Layman, Sunnylake's CEO, didn't take their first e-mail seriously, and now the hospital has ground to a halt. Paul's golden-boy IT director can't seem to outwit the hackers. Sunnylake's legal counsel tells Paul, "Literally every second is a liability." The chief of staff is in a mutinous fury. What should Paul do? He should pay the extortionists, advises Per Gullestrup, the CEO of Clipper Projects, who in late 2008 was closely involved in negotiations with Somali pirates who had seized a Clipper Group ship. But first Paul should hire a negotiator to prevent the extortionists from doing further mischief. He should absolutely not acquiesce, says Richard L. Nolan, a professor at the University of Washington's Michael G. Foster School of Business, because the hackers may have embedded further corruption in the system. And Paul must communicate fully with the staff, his board, patients, and the public. Peter R. Stephenson, chairman of the department of computing at Norwich University, recommends shutting down the servers, running a malware scan on every workstation in the hospital, and watching what happens for 24 hours, in case the extortionists are insiders.

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