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Weekly Cybersecurity Recap November 17

Breaches were rampant this week, impacting as many as 15 million individuals. The State of Maine announced that it bled 1.3 million resident records due to the global MOVEit vulnerability. Meanwhile, in Ohio, the City of Huber Heights was targeted by a ransomware attack; potentially, 50,000 residents may have their data exposed. In Michigan, the McLaren Health Care network was allegedly attacked by the ransomware gang BlackCat—losing 2.2 million records to exposure.

Stanford Health Network Announces MOVEit Breach

Stanford Health Care Alliance encompasses children’s hospitals, care plans, medicine partners, scholars, and the Stanford University faculty. The breach allegedly includes information from Stanford Health Care, Stanford Tri-Valley, Stanford Medicine Partners, Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital, and Packard Children’s Health Alliance.

BlackCat's McLaren Health Care Data Breach Exposes 2.2 Million Patients

McLaren Health Care is a network of 13 hospitals and three clinics serving the residents of north and central Michigan. They care for more than 732k lives by providing various services and network solutions, including a national cancer institute. Around August 2023, McLaren suffered a cyberattack—exposing the data of 2.2 million people.

City of Huber Heights Targeted by Ransomware Attack Sunday

The City of Huber Heights is in east Ohio, north of Dayton. The suburban area has a population of around 50,000, but other populated areas are nearby. Sunday morning, November 12th, 2023, the City of Huber Heights was subject to a ransomware attack; the investigation is ongoing, as the attack disrupted many City divisions.

State of Maine Information Stolen via MOVEit: Nearly All Residents at Risk

Maine hosts over 1.3 million people within a granite and forest landscape. The state government employs under 100,000 individuals but does not contain fewer departments than more populous states like California. Maine’s state departments coordinate with each other by using backend file transfer systems; a globally utilized file transfer tool, Progress Software’s MOVEit application, has put nearly all Maine resident information at risk.

ChatGPT Allegedly Targeted by Anonymous Sudan DDoS Attack

OpenAI has suffered a successful DDoS attack following the first-ever DevDay—where OpenAI announced ChatGPT-4 Turbo and the GPT Store. OpenAI’s ChatGPT launch was nearly a year ago and has since become the mainstream solution for AI tasks. The software hosts a hearty 180.5 million users, many of whom use the software for professional tasks. The DDoS attack is alarming, not because it happened, but because of who claims the event—Russian-backed Anonymous Sudan.

Weekly Cybersecurity Recap November 10

This week, a variety of cyberattacks and victims have appeared. The pilot union Allied Pilots Association (APA), representing American Airlines pilots, disclosed a ransomware attack early in the week. An active ransomware attack unfolded by Tuesday, targeting LEGO fanatic website BrickLink. Sand LifeStyle members also had exposed data following a breach in Singapore’s Marina Bay Sands resort network.

SaaS Analytic and Security Firm Sumo Logic Defends Against AWS Breach

Cloud-native and analytic solutions provider Sumo Logic has announced a cybersecurity incident stemming from a compromised AWS account. Sumo’s clients come from various industries, including airlines and video game franchises. On November 7th, they posted a breach notice to their website; they stopped the attack before the data could be unencrypted.

Mega-Luxury Casino Owned by Las Vegas Sands Suffers Data Breach

In Singapore, there is a massive luxury resort named the Marina Bay Sands (MBS); its owner is state-side, known as the Las Vegas Sands (LVS). LVS hosts 11 properties in Asia and the US—MBS hosts more than 2,500 rooms. MBS is a vast resort with more than a million feet of entertainment options and 50+ on-campus restaurants. Sand’s knows a lot about their clients, and following a recent data breach, so do hackers.

BrickLink, LEGO Fanatic Building Site, Allegedly Targeted by Ransomware

The ever-changing universe of LEGO dominates the toy industry; LEGO is one of the most recognizable toy brands in the world, a perk of which is die-hard fans. LEGO fanatics flock to BrickLink, a privately owned website where individuals can design, sell, and buy block sets. LEGO also features some designs following community voting. An estimated 1.4 million people have registered accounts with the platform, including sellers and consumers.