How a healthcare hacker is pressuring victims to pay up
A hacker who claims to have stolen 10 million patient records is extorting victims for money
Pay up or face your patients' wrath.
That’s how one hacker is trying to shake down U.S. healthcare providers after stealing sensitive data about their patients.
TheDarkOverlord claims to have stolen 10 million patient records and is selling them on the black market. In the meantime, the hacker is trying to extort the providers by telling them their patient data won't be sold if they pay a ransom.
At least one of the healthcare providers so far has refused to give in, TheDarkOverlord said in an interview Friday. To apply pressure, the hacker claims to have called some of its patients to warn them their records will be leaked if the provider doesn't pay up.
“How upset would you be if your provider failed to protect your sensitive healthcare information?” the hacker said, in an encrypted chat conducted through the Jabber messaging service.
That's the dilemma facing several healthcare providers whose servers were compromised -- should they pay a ransom, or risk their patients' data being exposed?
TheDarkOverlord claims to have stolen social security numbers, phone numbers, and addresses of millions of patients, all of which could be used for identity theft. The records come from healthcare providers across the U.S. and are being sold in batches on the black market for up to $134,000.
The hacker has told the healthcare providers to pay by a certain date or see their data sold. To add further pressure, TheDarkOverlord has set up a Twitter account where firms are named if they don't meet the demands.
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