Live Streams Go Down Across Cox Radio and TV Stations in Apparent Ransomware Attack (therecord.media) 33
Catalin Cimpanu, reporting at Record: Live streams for radio and TV stations owned by the Cox Media Group, one of the largest media conglomerates in the US, have gone down earlier today in what multiple sources have described as a ransomware attack. The incident took place earlier this morning and impacted live streaming capabilities for the Cox radio and TV stations. Official websites, telephone lines, and other IT systems remained running. While live streams for most of the impacted TV stations have now returned online, most of the Cox radio streams are still offline at the time of writing.
This just never ends. (Score:3, Interesting)
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Re:This just never ends. (Score:4, Funny)
Well, their cox fell off.
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So when is someone going to ask the right questions?
When they have no other options left.
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Because they keep ignoring the sign:
Do Not Feed The Pirates
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now they've done it (Score:1)
Canâ(TM)t pay the billion dollar judgement so (Score:1)
Remember, no one is facing personal liability or criminal prosecution over their wanton piracy. Ergo all you have to do is make sure you have a complete corporate structure in place, donâ(TM)t pierce the corporate veil, and plan to be ransomwares and you, too, can pirate with impunity.
And it will keep happening (Score:5, Insightful)
As long as companies keep paying the ransoms, criminals will keep coming back for more. No one should be surprised.
Make it illegal to pay ransoms and watch how fast the attacks dry up.
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Yes, you let it happen. I know that's harsh, but if we'd done this sooner, those attacks wouldn't have happened in the first place. And what about the next 500 attacks that will be just as serious? Short term there's some suffering, but long term it's far better.
If it were me, I'd start with a firewall that blocks all Russian's IPs as a starter as a punitive measure.
It wouldn't work. They'd just route their attacks through a relay in another country. That kind of response would hurt millions of innocent people, but for the criminals it would barely even be an inconvenience.
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The shortages were caused by idiots causing a run on gasoline. Just like last year, there was a run on toilet paper, meat, canned food, etc.
A week downtime is nothing. The pipeline is long, and there
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No, it didn't take the pipelines down. It took down the billing system and the greedy operators shut down the pipeline out of fear that they might not get paid.
The operators imposed a huge economic hit on the east coast so that the
C-level exec would not miss their bonus.
We Live in Interesting Times (Score:4, Insightful)
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To be thorough, they wildcarded their attack: "DELETE *OX". Collateral damage is not their problem.
Put your system on ROM (Score:1)
There, now it's bulletproof
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Yeah, they can. Put the chip in a socket. You'll always have a working system until the smoke leaks out. If you want secure, it's can't be writable, you do that somewhere else
Impractical on any level (Score:1)
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If you want "secure", you do what you gotta do. The compromises we are under now are insufficient. Time is not important, just move in the right direction.
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What makes this "indiscriminate"? It focuses directly on mitigating the problem in the most secure fashion possible. You cannot scramble a read only system, you put the writable parts somewhere else, a safe distance away. Well, regardless, a simple cost/benefit study will bring out the best solution to the whole thing. It might be cheaper just to let it happen and pass the costs on to the customer.