The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Cyberattac­k's cost could reach $17M

Atlanta spokespers­on: Officials ‘pleased’ with progress of recovery.

- By Stephen Deere sdeere@ajc.com

The cyberattac­k that struck the city of Atlanta in March could cost taxpayers as much as $17 million, according to a report obtained by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on and Channel 2 Action News.

The seven-page document — marked “confidenti­al and privileged” — identifies roughly $6 million in existing contracts along with an additional $11 million in potential costs associated with the March 22 attack.

“It is breathtaki­ng in that they’re having to do a complete overhaul,” Don Hunt, a professor at Georgia State University’s Andrew Young School of Policy Studies, told Channel 2. “They’ve been very busy the past few months.”

The report does not disclose who authored it, nor does it make clear how much of the expenses

the city would have incurred regardless of the attack.

But with a potential figure of $17 million, Atlanta’s ransomware attack is one of the more expensive suffered by any local government in the U.S. in 2018.

By comparison, a ransomware attack against Colorado’s Department of Transporta­tion earlier this year is expected to cost $2 million.

“We are pleased with the progress of the recovery efforts. In addition to responding to the criminal attack against the City of Atlanta, we are using this opportunit­y to make the City more secure,” said a spokespers­on in an email. “Unfortunat­ely, in today’s world, government­s are seeing an increase in cyber attacks . ... As you already know, the City is insured against cyber-attack. We continue to work through that process for the most cost-effective outcome for our residents.”

In March, city employees were told to shut off their computers to stop a virus from spreading through the network and encrypting data. A cyber criminal group demanded that the city pay it about $51,000 in bitcoins — a crypto currency that allows for anonymous transactio­ns online.

The city refused to pay the ransom.

For weeks the watershed department could only accept payments at City Hall, and the city’s municipal court had no way of accepting payments for traffic tickets.

The city has yet to reveal the extent of data loss. But two months ago, the AJC and Channel 2 Action News discovered that years of Atlanta police footage from officers’ patrol cars was lost and unable to be recovered after the March attack.

Chief Erika Shields said the lost footage could compromise DUI cases if an officer’s testimony isn’t sufficient. It’s unclear how many investigat­ions might be affected.

Of the $6 million the city has already agreed to spend, the vast majority is paying for security services and software upgrades, according to the confidenti­al report. The city will pay about $1.1 million for new desktops, laptops, smartphone­s and tablets.

Before the attack, the city received years of warnings about security weaknesses.

The city’s independen­t auditor in 2010 warned that the Informatio­n Technology Department “currently does not have funding for business continuity and disaster recovery plans.” In 2014, the city still lacked such a plan.

Another audit released in January found that the department of Atlanta Informatio­n Management and the Office of Informatio­n Security regularly identified vulnerabil­ities in the city’s network but not the root causes.

“In one case,” the audit said, “monthly vulnerabil­ity scan results indicated the presence of 1,500-2,000 severe vulnerabil­ities in the scanned population, with a history that went back over a year with no evidence of mitigation of the underlying issues.”

According to a 2017 list of employees in the department of Atlanta Informatio­n Management, only two of the department’s 154 employees had the word security in their titles.

The city’s informatio­n technology leadership appears to have been overwhelmi­ngly focused on making Atlanta a so-called “Smart City” — a designatio­n for cities that emphasize informatio­n and communicat­ion technology to enhance public services such as utilities and transporta­tion.

However, several cybersecur­ity trade publicatio­ns in recent months have highlighte­d how these cities are especially vulnerable to attacks because of massive interdepen­dent computer systems that constantly communicat­e with each other and often aren’t tested for weaknesses before being deployed.

In the first few months of 2018, the department of Atlanta Informatio­n Management’s Twitter page references “Smart Cities” in nearly every tweet.

Just before the attack, the department on Twitter advertises a locally held smart city technology forum titled “Can’t Out-Smart Atlanta.”

“It’s Smart City panel time!” the department tweets on March 15.

Its next tweet is a video of Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms’ first news conference regarding the ransomware cyberattac­k.

Atlanta’s ransomware attack is one of the more expensive suffered by any local government in the U.S. in 2018.

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