The Oklahoman

Some airport websites go offline in attack

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The websites for some major U.S. airports went down early Monday in an apparent coordinate­d denial-of-service attack, although officials said flights were not affected.

The attacks followed a call by a shadowy group of pro-Russian hackers that calls itself Killnet for coordinate­d denial-of-service attacks on the targets. The group published a target list on its Telegram channel.

“We noticed this morning that the external website was down, and our IT and security people are in the process of investigat­ing,” said Andrew Gobeil, a spokesman for Atlanta’s HartsfieldJackson Internatio­nal Airport. “There has been no impact on operations.”

Portions of the public-facing side of the Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport website were also disrupted, spokeswoma­n Victoria Spilabotte said. “No internal airport systems were compromise­d and there were no operationa­l disruption­s.”

Spilabotte said the airport notified the FBI and the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion, and the airport’s informatio­n-technology team was working to restore all services and investigat­e the cause.

Several other airports reported problems connecting to their websites and appeared to be functionin­g very slowly, including Chicago’s O’Hare Internatio­nal Airport website, which was included on Killnet’s target list.

The Chicago Department of Aviation said in a statement that websites for O’Hare and Midway Airport went offline early Monday but that no airport operations were affected.

Last week, a group of hackers claimed responsibi­lity for cyberattac­ks against state government websites across the country.

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