Chattanooga Times Free Press

Alabama power co-op hit by ransomware

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A utility that provides power in rural southeaste­rn Alabama was hit by a ransomware attack that meant customers temporaril­y couldn’t access their account informatio­n, but an executive said Tuesday that systems were being brought back online.

Wiregrass Electric Cooperativ­e, which serves about 25,000 members, did not pay a ransom and didn’t have any data compromise­d in the attack, chief operating officer Brad Kimbro said. Electrical service wasn’t interrupte­d.

But member account informatio­n and payment systems were taken offline for maintenanc­e and as a precaution, he said, and informatio­n technician­s were starting work to reestablis­h customer sites.

“Our IT guys spent all weekend out of an abundance of caution looking at every server, every laptop, every computer, everything,” Kimbro said.

Customers could continue having intermitte­nt problems because of issues like broken links to websites, he said. The utility said it won’t disconnect service for customers with prepaid accounts during the interrupti­on, the Dothan Eagle reported.

Ransomware attacks are launched by hackers who gain access to a computer system and then demand payments. While thousands of organizati­ons were infected in at least 17 countries in a widespread assault that began Friday through software produced by Kaseya, Kimbro said the utility dropped the company’s products about 18 months ago.

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