The Guardian (USA)

Colonial Pipeline confirms it paid $4.4m ransom to hacker gang after attack

- Associated Press

The operator of the nation’s largest fuel pipeline confirmed it paid $4.4m to a gang of hackers who broke into its computer systems.

Colonial Pipeline said Wednesday that after it learned of the 7 May ransomware attack, the company took its pipeline system offline and needed to do everything in its power to restart it quickly and safely, and made the decision then to pay the ransom.

“This decision was not made lightly,” but it was one that had to be made, a company spokesman said. “Tens of millions of Americans rely on Colonial: hospitals, emergency medical services, law enforcemen­t agencies, fire department­s, airports, truck drivers and the traveling public.”

Joseph Blount, Colonial Pipeline’s CEO, told the Wall Street Journal he authorized the payment because the company didn’t know the extent of the damage and wasn’t sure how long it would take to bring the pipeline’s systems back.

The FBI discourage­s making ransom payments to ransomware attackers, because paying encourages criminal networks around the globe who have hit thousands of businesses and health care systems in the US in the past year alone. But many victims of ransomware attacks, where hackers demand large sums of money to decrypt stolen data or to prevent it from being leaked online, opt to pay.

“I know that’s a highly controvers­ial decision,” Blount said. “I didn’t make it lightly. I will admit that I wasn’t comfortabl­e seeing money go out the door to people like this.”

“But it was the right thing to do for the country,” he said.

Blount said Colonial paid the ransom in consultati­on with experts who previously dealt with the group behind the attacks, DarkSide, which rents out its ransomware to partners to carry out the actual attacks.

Multiple sources had confirmed to the Associated Press that Colonial Pipeline had paid the criminals who committed the cyberattac­k a ransom of nearly $5m in cryptocurr­ency for the software decryption key required to unscramble their data network.

A ransom payment of 75 Bitcoin was paid the day after the criminals locked up Colonial’s corporate network, according to Tom Robinson, co-founder of the cryptocurr­ency-tracking firm Elliptic. Prior to Robinson’s blog post, two people briefed on the case had confirmed the payment amount to AP.

Blount told the Journal the attack was discovered around 5.30am on 7 May. It took Colonial about an hour to shut down the pipeline, which has 260 delivery points across 13 states and Washington DC, Blount said. That helped prevent the infection from potentiall­y migrating to the pipeline’s operationa­l controls.

The pipeline system delivers about 45% of the gasoline consumed on the east coast, and Colonial, which is based in Alpharetta, Georgia, halted fuel supplies for nearly a week. That led to panic-buying and shortages at gas stations from Washington DC to Florida.

Colonial restarted its pipeline a week ago, but it took time to resume a full delivery schedule, and the panicbuyin­g led to gasoline shortages. More than 9,500 gas stations were out of fuel on Wednesday, including half of the gas stations in DC and 40% of stations in North Carolina, according to Gasbuddy.com, which tracks fuel prices and station outages.

 ?? Photograph: Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA ?? A cyberattac­k forced the shutdown of 5,500 miles of Colonial Pipeline’s sprawling interstate system.
Photograph: Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA A cyberattac­k forced the shutdown of 5,500 miles of Colonial Pipeline’s sprawling interstate system.

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