Dayton Daily News

Ransomware attack hitsMorain­e company’s national operations

Tyler Technologi­es says its election data products not affected.

- ByThomasGn­au

AMoraine company’s national operations — one that contracts with localities to post election results — was hit by a ransomware attack lastweek, an attack that struck less than 40 days before the Nov. 3 general election.

“Tyler Technologi­es is in the process of responding to a security incident involving unauthoriz­ed access to our internal phone and informatio­n technology systemsby anunknownt­hird party,” the Plano, Texas-based company says in a message on its corporate web site. “We are treating this matter with the highest priority and working with independen­t IT experts to conduct a thorough investigat­ion and response.”

Early onWednesda­y lastweek, the company became aware that an “unauthoriz­ed intruder” had disrupted access to its internal

systems, Tyler said.

But Tyler said any product it has that is used in the presentati­on of election data was not impacted in the attack.

“Upon discovery and out of an abundance of caution, we shut down points of access toexternal systems and immediatel­y began investigat­ing and remediatin­g the problem,” the business said. “That same morning, we engaged outside IT security and forensics experts to conduct a detailed review and help us securely restore affected equipment. We have implemente­d targeted monitoring to supplement the monitoring systems we already had in place, and we have notified lawenforce­ment.”

Tyler said also it has confirmed that the malicious software the intruder used was ransomware. “Because this is an active investigat­ion, we will not provide any additional specifics relating to our incident response or our investigat­ion at this time.”

Tyler said further that “all informatio­n available to us

continues to indicate that this incident was directed at Tyler’s internal corporate environmen­t and not the separate environmen­t where we host client systems.”

In early 2019, publicly traded Tyler announced an expansion at itsMoraine operation, adding 200 new employees, with an additional 45,000 square feet of space, bringing the total square footage used in the building off Dryden Road to 85,000.

The local growth was focused on Tyler’sAppraisal

& Tax Division, which is based in Moraine.

Questions were sent to a representa­tive of the company.

Jan Kelly, director of the Montgomery County Board of Elections, said her board does not rely on Tyler Technologi­es for elections services.

The New York Times, in a story over the weekend, noted that Russian operators are behind many ransomware attacks.

“With only 37 days before the election, federal investigat­ors still do not have a clear picture ofwhether the ransomware attacks clobbering American networks are purely criminal acts, seeking a quick payday, or Trojan horses for more nefarious Russian interferen­ce,” the Times said.

Tyler provides software andservice­s togovernme­nts for tracking land records, human resources actions, tax and invoice collection­s and more.

Local government­s also use Tyler platforms to post election informatio­n online, but the company has said data for that software is hosted onAmazonWe­b Services, not on the network that was attacked.

“Tyler’s Socrata product is a SaaS data platform that is hosted offsite on AWS (AmazonWeb Services), not on Tyler’s internal network that was impacted,” Tyler said on itsweb siteMonday. “Wehaveneve­rhada report that a bad actor has used our Socrata platform to display incorrect or misleading election results, polling locations, campaign finance informatio­n, or other civic data.”

 ?? AP ?? Tyler Technologi­es , amajorU.S. provider of software to state and local government­s, including the online publishing of election results, told customers that an unknown intruder broke into its phone and IT systems.
AP Tyler Technologi­es , amajorU.S. provider of software to state and local government­s, including the online publishing of election results, told customers that an unknown intruder broke into its phone and IT systems.

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