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Atrium Health’s website disrupted Monday after threat from Russian hacking group

Atrium Health’s website experienced outages Monday afternoon as a Russian hacking group shared a threat against the Charlotte-based health care system and other U.S. groups.

The company’s “hospital systems and patient portal” weren’t affected, Atrium said.

Killnet listed Atrium Health’s Cabarrus County location in a post on the social media platform Telegram along with more than a dozen other hospital systems, Observer news partner WSOC reported.

Killnet is a pro-Russia hacking group known for its cyberattacks, primarily on European governments and infrastructure. They commonly use “denial of service” attacks to disrupt business, Politico reported previously.

Denial of service attacks “occur when legitimate users are unable to access information systems, devices, or other network resources due to the actions of a malicious cyber threat actor,” the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency says. Hackers “flood the targeted host or network with traffic until the target cannot respond or simply crashes, preventing access for legitimate users.”

In recent months, Killnet targeted countries supporting Ukraine in its war with Russia, according to Politico.

Atrium said in a statement about 7 p.m. it had “successfully resolved the situation,” which it said was “similar to widespread instances at other health systems around the world on Monday.”

“It’s important to note the disruption affected only our public-facing website,” the company said. “Our hospital systems and patient portal remained fully functional at all times.”

Other hospital systems across the U.S. — including University of Michigan Health and Stanford Health Care — reportedly experienced problems with their websites Monday.

This story was originally published January 30, 2023 at 5:50 PM.

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Mary Ramsey
The Charlotte Observer
Mary Ramsey is the local government accountability reporter for The Charlotte Observer. A native of the Carolinas, she studied journalism at the University of South Carolina and has also worked in Phoenix, Arizona and Louisville, Kentucky. Support my work with a digital subscription
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