City
Epaper

Health data of over 8 mn people accessed by MOVEit hackers: US govt contractor

By IANS | Updated: July 28, 2023 13:00 IST

San Francisco, July 28 Maximus, a US government services contracting company, has confirmed that hackers exploited a vulnerability ...

Open in App

San Francisco, July 28 Maximus, a US government services contracting company, has confirmed that hackers exploited a vulnerability in MOVEit Transfer to access the protected health information of 8 to 11 million individuals.

Maximus is a contractor that manages and administers federal and local government-sponsored programmes, as well as student loan servicing.

The breach is believed to be the largest healthcare data breach of the year, as well as the most serious to result from the MOVEit mass-hackings.

In the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filing, Maximum revealed that the data was stolen by exploiting a zero-day vulnerability in the MOVEit file transfer application.

The Clop ransomware gang used this flaw to compromise hundreds of high-profile companies around the world.

"The company believes those files contain personal information, including social security numbers, protected health information and/or other personal information, of at least 8 to 11 million individuals to whom the company anticipates providing notice of the incident," the company said in SEC filing.

Moreover, the company said that it began notifying impacted customers as well as federal and state regulators and that the investigation and remediation of the security incident will cost approximately $15 million.

Last month, Clop, the Russia-linked data extortion group behind the MOVEit mass hacks listed several other victims of its mass hack, which also include banks and universities, apart from federal government agencies.

On its website, Clop listed US-based financial services organisations 1st Source and First National Bankers Bank; Boston-based investment management firm Putnam Investments; the Netherlands-based Landal Greenparks; and the UK-based energy giant Shell, among other victims.

Clop contacts its victims to demand a ransom payment to decrypt or delete their stolen files.

According to researchers, Clop may have been exploiting the MOVEit vulnerability as far back as 2021.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: congresspitrodadelhimodideepikabjpwest-bengaldeepika-padukoneajay-devgnthakur
Open in App

Related Stories

MumbaiBMC Elections 2026: Mumbai Civic Body Likely To Announce Poll Dates Today at 4 PM

MumbaiWho Is Tejasvee Ghosalkar? Shiv Sena UBT Leader and Former Corporator Joins BJP Ahead of BMC Polls

NationalDelhi Traffic Update: Police Issue Diversions and Restrictions Ahead of Lionel Messi’s GOAT India Tour Event at Arun Jaitley Stadium

NationalWatch: Toxic Smog Blankets Delhi’s Anand Vihar as City Grapples with Severe AQI

NationalDelhi Pollution: 50% Work From Home for Offices, Hybrid Classes for Students Till Class 11

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologySensex, Nifty end marginally lower as weak global cues weigh on markets

TechnologyIndia logs record 270 deals worth $11.4 billion in Nov: Report

TechnologyBHEL pays dividend cheque of over Rs 109 crore to govt

TechnologyIndia’s energy sector to emerge as a global case study: Piyush Goyal

TechnologyIndia's EV sales could reach 22 million units by 2035: Report