According to statistics gathered by Malwarebytes, attacks against government and business are up by a whopping 365 percent.
IBM’s consumer statistics aren’t much better, reporting a 116 percent increase in ransomware attacks targeting individuals.
Set against this backdrop, the fact that Texas local government offices have recently been paralyzed by a ransomware attack is unsurprising. What is more surprising, however, is the scope, scale and highly coordinated nature of those attacks. In all, a total of 22 local government agencies were affected, which had the impact of stopping local services in towns across the state.
The incident is being managed by the Texas Department of Information Resources (TDIR). To date, they have not revealed the names of the local agencies that were impacted, nor been forthcoming with any other details other than the following.
“At this time, the evidence gathered indicates the attacks came from one single threat actor. Investigations into the origins of this attack are ongoing; however, responses and recovery are the priority at this time.”
Give yourself a moment to let that sink in.
A single threat actor coordinated a successful state-wide attack that brought down services in 22 different local agencies. It’s no secret that hackers around the world are learning from each other, creating “hacking best practices,” and congregating into larger and more organized groups.
As they do so, they’re able to tackle increasingly larger and more robust targets. If these groups can impact a significant portion of a state like Texas today, what will they be capable of by next year? This has all the earmarks of a trial run for an even larger attack, and that should unsettle everyone.