06-21-2019, 06:18 AM
The City of Atlanta had something like this happen a year or two back. Atlanta didn't have insurance (it does now, I think), and didn't pay the ransom. It took them months to get some systems back in operation.
I'd guess a lot of cities are using legacy systems and very old equipment that's not getting current patches, and don't have good procedures for getting out the patches they do have available.
I think C(-)ris has it right about the difficulty of dealing with backups on an infected system. But add on top of that how budgeting and implementation works for any public entity, and I can understand how difficult even large cities find it to respond. You'd think it was a huge market opportunity for someone like IBM, Deloitte, or Oracle to come up with ways to fix this kind of thing quickly. But I've not heard of anyone offering that.
Good luck.
- Winston
I'd guess a lot of cities are using legacy systems and very old equipment that's not getting current patches, and don't have good procedures for getting out the patches they do have available.
I think C(-)ris has it right about the difficulty of dealing with backups on an infected system. But add on top of that how budgeting and implementation works for any public entity, and I can understand how difficult even large cities find it to respond. You'd think it was a huge market opportunity for someone like IBM, Deloitte, or Oracle to come up with ways to fix this kind of thing quickly. But I've not heard of anyone offering that.
Good luck.
- Winston