The Rebekka Armstrong Archivesstart of this news story reads like a typical vaguely futuristic plot from a movie that isn't hard to imagine coming to a theater near you.
First, a hacker breaks into the fare system of the San Francisco Municipal Railway on Friday. Unable to immediately regain control of the system, railway officials allow free rides until further notice. Then the hacker demands a ransom to stop the attack, but officials release a statement on Sunday saying the situation is "contained," and things are soon mostly back to normal.
SEE ALSO: San Francisco's Muni transit system hacked, resulting in free rides for allThe lasting effect on the transit system is likely minimal. Neither trains nor buses were affected by the hack, and the perpetrator wasn't able to steal any customer information, according to the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency. But it's not hard to see how this could be the beginning of a larger series of attacks on public infrastructure.
"With any of these attacks, the level of effectiveness will really dictate that we'll see more of them," Justin Fier, the director of cyber intelligence and analysis at Darktrace, a cybersecurity firm, told Mashable. "Thankfully it was minimal and it didn't affect actual trains, but my hope is that it doesn't continue to adapt and hit more sophisticated pieces of our infrastructure."
The level of effectiveness depends on how you look at the hack.
According to the hacker, the malware found a home in the MUNI transit fare system by something of an accident.
"Our software working completely automatically and we don't have targeted attack to anywhere," the hacker, who used the email account [email protected], told The Vergevia email over the weekend. "SFMTA network was Very Open and 2000 Server/PC infected by software."
If we believe the person behind that email account (which also appeared on hacked fare machines in San Francisco), then the malware was likely self-reproducing, and was sent out to email account after email account until someone downloaded an infected attachment.
The person behind the email account said they were asking for 100 bitcoin, worth around $73,000, when they were contacted by The San Francisco Examiner. They claimed they hadn't been contacted by any transit officials at the time of that article, and the person behind that email account has not responded to Mashableat the time of this writing.
Though the attacker's conversations with journalists make the digital assault seem random, Fier believes it was fairly targeted. Fier believes institutions are more likely to pay a ransom rather than individuals. Other victims of "ransomware" attacks, including schools and hospitals, need to be open and operational in order to provide their services and make money. It seems reasonable to conclude that a hacker looking for money is aware of that, and will tailor his or her targets accordingly, rather than send a self-replicating malware in hopes that it finds a target with enough money to potentially provide a sizable ransom.
MUNI's Sunday statement made no mention of paying any kind of ransom requested by the hacker, but the hacker may have gotten what he wanted regardless.
"Of course the money would have been nice, but I'm sure they will be just as happy with the level of exposure they got," Fier said. "It will show them how media in particular will react to it, and they might attempt again based on those reactions."
JD.com gradually rolls out Alipay integration as China pushes for eOnePlus launches Ace 5 series with Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 and Elite processor · TechNode2024 smartphone shipments in China reach 285 million units, Vivo leads the market · TechNodeWeChat HarmonyOS version arrives on Huawei AppGallery · TechNodeChinese car maker GAC to use humanoid robots powered by solidChinese car maker GAC to use humanoid robots powered by solidVivo to invest heavily in mixed reality and humanoid robots, says executive VP · TechNode01.AI refutes rumors of selling teams to Alibaba · TechNodeSamsung’s Xi’an NAND flash factory reportedly cuts production by over 10% · TechNodeXiaomi announces Electric Motor V8s won its 10 Million Technology Award · TechNodeChina’s CATL aims to boost tech innovation by funding suppliers · TechNodePDD tests new feature allowing merchants to offer targeted return shipping · TechNodeNetEase unveils new martial arts RPG Sword Heart Dragon Carver · TechNodeWeChat tests gift giving feature for online stores · TechNodeBYD announces recruitment for humanoid robot research team · TechNodeLynk & Co’s flagship SUV to compete with Range Rover, Li Auto’s L9 · TechNodeBlack Myth Tmall flagship store launches ahead of Lunar New Year · TechNodeAI unicorn Zhipu raises $412 million in new funding round · TechNodeFormer Microsoft and Alibaba veteran Hu Yunhua joins Zhipu AI as head of ChatGLM · TechNodeFreshippo CEO announces sustained profitability after 50% surge in customer base · TechNode Study finds racial discrimination by Uber and Lyft drivers Solder vs. Paste on the Core i9 Butterball will open a 24/7 text line this Thanksgiving for all your turkey questions Watch Felix the hero duck save a chicken from a hawk This might be the last MacBook Pro with a headphone jack Woman hired as 'eating officer' gets paid to eat in restaurants Scientists built a 'nightmare machine' just to scare you senseless 'Overwatch' fans get an early peek at Sombra, probably Election got you down? You can't go wrong voting the 'Sausage Party' Tom Hanks is dressing up as David Pumpkins for Halloween. Any questions? Don't bother checking into the Dakota Pipeline protest to confuse police One of the biggest rumors about next year's iPhone may have just been confirmed A simple Twitter change has already led to confusion and frustration Apple hikes MacBook prices in India Broncos cheerleader in inflatable dinosaur costume is the real MVP Billionaire Peter Thiel: 'Single Please enjoy this Vine of Ricky Gervais dressed as a pumpkin Adele explains why she doesn't support Trump, we bet he's upset Meteorologist and his green screen get into the Halloween spirit Fisker is back and ready to take on Tesla with a new self
2.1828s , 10132.6015625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Rebekka Armstrong Archives】,Miracle Information Network