UnitedHealth did not say how much was paid to the hackers, although the “ALPHV/Blackcat” internet hacker group had asked for ...
UnitedHealth's CEO Andrew Witty confirmed in a Senate hearing that he had conceded to paying ransom hackers $22 million.
Health insurance provider UnitedHealth paid a multimillion-dollar ransom to hackers who broke into one of its subsidiaries, ...
For the first time, UnitedHealth acknowledged that it paid ransom to "protect ... organizations not to pay ransom so stealing patient data becomes less lucrative. Hackers acquired health and ...
Senators questioned UnitedHealth Group CEO Andrew Witty on Wednesday about the cyberattack on its subsidiary Change ...
The ransom was paid “as part of the company’s commitment to do all it could to protect patient data from disclosure,” a ...
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 ...
In a statement sent to WIRED and other news outlets on Monday evening, Change Healthcare wrote that it paid a ransom to a cybercriminal group extorting the company, a hacker gang known as AlphV or ...
In letters to both congressional committees, the American Hospital Association said an internally survey of its members found that 94% of hospitals reported damage to cash flow and more than half ...
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 ...
"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.