There’s a spine-chilling uptick in cyberattacks—the FBI received a record number of cyber-related complaints last year, with reported losses of over $4.1 billion. A housing organization might not seem like the most lucrative target for a hacker (compared to a billion-dollar private sector business), but criminals are opportunists.
The public sector, including affordable housing organizations and municipalities, is increasingly vulnerable to cyber attacks due to the lack of training and IT infrastructure investment. It takes far less effort to breach a small- or medium-sized public sector organization compared to a global mega-corporation. The monetary reward might not be as high for hackers, but there’s less risk of being caught.
The examples below show the impacts of ransomware attacks on housing organizations and the public
sector:
An attack on a housing organization left 700 employees and some 55,000 residents temporarily without access to the organization’s web portal. The hacker also leaked information about dozens of employees online.
A cyberattack infected an entire county, taking the county’s systems offline, according to the FBI. The county had backup servers, but the servers were also hacked because they weren’t isolated from the county’s main network. The county paid a $132,000 ransom, the FBI noted.
Hackers infected a city’s systems and demanded a $76,000 ransom. While the ransom wasn’t paid, according to the FBI, it cost the city an estimated $9 million to remediate the attack and restore services.
A housing organization had its financial data held hostage at a time when the data was necessary for reporting. The housing authority decided not to pay the ransom. The hack still cost the housing authority “both time and stress.”
A county’s computer systems were infected after a user allegedly opened a malicious email link or attachment, according to the FBI. County officials decided to rebuild their systems rather than pay the $1.2 million ransom. The county spent $1 million on new equipment and technical assistance, the FBI said.
A housing organization experienced two successive ransomware attacks, which the organization’s leader described as “a nightmare.” The attacks forced the organization’s employees to retype and scan documents to recoup encrypted files.
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Includes copyrighted material from a company under the HAI Group family, with its permission. This post is for informational purposes only and is not intended to provide legal advice, and shall not be relied on as such. We strongly recommend consulting with legal counsel or an appropriate subject matter expert.