UnitedHealth Group paid hackers a ransom this year to protect patient data, a spokesperson for the company confirmed to 5 EYEWITNESS NEWS on Thursday. On Feb. 21, the Minnetonka-based health ...
UnitedHealth's CEO, Andrew Witty, confirmed before a Senate hearing that the company paid $22 million to the ransom hacker group Blackcat because a subsidiary of the health insurance provider was ...
Health insurance provider UnitedHealth paid a multimillion-dollar ransom to hackers who broke into one of its subsidiaries, disrupting healthcare providers across the country for months ...
More than two months after the start of a ransomware debacle whose impact ranks among the worst in the history of cybersecurity, the medical firm Change Healthcare finally confirmed what ...
In a Wednesday hearing in front of the U.S. Senate Committee on Finance, UnitedHealth Group CEO Andrew Witty confirmed for the first time that the company paid a $22 million ransom to hackers who ...
In a Wednesday hearing in front of the U.S. Senate Committee on Finance, UnitedHealth Group CEO Andrew Witty confirmed for the first time that the company paid a $22 million ransom to hackers who ...
In a Wednesday hearing in front of the U.S. Senate Committee on Finance, UnitedHealth Group CEO Andrew Witty confirmed for the first time that the company paid a $22 million ransom to hackers who ...
UnitedHealth Group admitted to paying ransom in an attempt to ... Department revealed U.S. hospitals have paid $100 million to Russian ransomware hackers. The report noted more than 400 ...
The company paid the hackers a $22 million ransom, he said. “I believe the bigger the company, the bigger the responsibility to protect its systems from hackers. UHG was a big target long before ...
Change Healthcare has also reported that hackers behind the attacks obtained ... Witty also publicly confirmed that Change Healthcare paid a ransom, a practice that critics say incentivizes ...
UnitedHealth Group on Monday said it paid ransom to cyberthreat actors to try to protect patient data, following the February cyberattack on its subsidiary Change Healthcare. The company also ...
"A ransom was paid as part of the company's commitment to do all it could to protect patient data from disclosure," a UnitedHealth Group spokesperson confirmed with CBS News late Monday.