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Utah Medicaid Cyberattack Affected 25,000 Social Security Numbers

Utah Medicaid Cyberattack

First Posted: 04/ 6/2012 6:03 pm Updated: 04/ 7/2012 1:22 pm

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Utah health officials said Friday that hackers who broke into state computers last weekend stole far more medical records than originally thought, and the data likely includes Social Security numbers of children who have received public assistance.

Approximately 182,000 beneficiaries of Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program had their personal information stolen, and about 25,000 Social Security numbers were compromised, Utah Department of Health officials said.

Officials originally estimated that about 24,000 people had their records stolen after someone attacked a server beginning March 30. But the culprit actually downloaded 24,000 files, and each file contained hundreds of records, said Stephanie Weiss, spokeswoman for the Utah Department of Technology Services.

The information was stolen from a new server at the Health Department, Weiss said. Although the state has multiple layers of security on every server, a technician installed a password that wasn't as secure as needed.

"We understand clients are worried about who may have accessed their personal information, and that many of them feel violated by having their information compromised," said Michael Hales, deputy director of the Health Department. "But we also hope they understand we are doing everything we can to protect them from further harm."

Clients whose information was stolen will be alerted, with the first priority being those whose Social Security numbers were taken, Health Department spokesman Tom Hudachko said. The department is offering free credit monitoring for a year to anyone who information was stolen and has established a hotline for concerned clients to call.

There is no way to narrow down the potential victims to a specific area of the state because the claims come from clinics throughout Utah, Hudachko said. Also, because providers have up to a year to file a claim, it is difficult to even narrow it down to recent patients.

While the investigation is ongoing, Hudachko said the department is recommending that every Medicaid client monitor credit reports, bank accounts and other areas the hackers could target with the information.

Monitoring financial accounts and credit reports is an important first step, but somebody who knows their identity has been stolen should also alert the three credit bureaus about potential fraud, said Kirk Torgensen, a chief deputy with the Utah attorney general's office who specializes in identity theft.

Protecting children can be more difficult, since they will normally not have a credit report, credit cards or bank accounts to monitor. To assist parents, the state has partnered with the credit bureau TransUnion to provide a way for a child's Social Security number to be registered and their credit essentially frozen until they are old enough to need it.

The website, http://www.idtheft.utah.gov , also allows victims of fraud to file an affidavit that will reduce the amount of time — sometimes hundreds of hours — that identity theft victims have to spend fixing their credit.

Based on the hacker's IP address, which identifies a computer on the Internet, Utah's recent attack likely came from eastern Europe, Weiss said. Someone started downloading the files Sunday, and the server was taken offline Monday after the state's security software caught the attack.

Attacks on other state servers haven't been discovered, "but we're continually reviewing them to make sure they're secure," Weiss said.

___

Concerned clients can call the Health Department's hotline at 800-662-9651 or go to http://www.health.utah.gov/databreach for more information.

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SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Utah health officials said Friday that hackers who broke into state computers last weekend stole far more medical records than originally thought, and the data likely includes ...
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Utah health officials said Friday that hackers who broke into state computers last weekend stole far more medical records than originally thought, and the data likely includes ...
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01:14 PM on 04/09/2012
"Based on the hacker's IP address, which identifies a computer on the Internet, Utah's recent attack likely came from eastern Europe..."

Or the hacker was using a SOCKS proxy, a VPN, the Tor network, the I2P network, FreeNet, SSH tunnels, or any combination of the above (and more) to obscure the actual source of his or her packets from you, and could've just as easily been IN the building the server resided in as anywhere else.

Noobs.
01:08 PM on 04/10/2012
Exactly what I was thinking.
10:56 AM on 04/09/2012
is nothing safe now
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
teachone
Knowledge is Power
10:49 AM on 04/09/2012
I think the republicans/teaparty and the filthy wealthy are behind all this, they hate everyone but "their kind" and have been buying up prisons all over this country, no doubt in an attempt to misuse the law and try to set most in this country up with accusations of false crimes in order to throw them all in jail so they can get further domination and control of this country and all the resources, they are petrified they are going to lose control of this country and so they want to oppress and control the poor and middleclass and keep them from voting as they know that is the only power they have left, the power to vote them out and freedom of speech, they want to end both of these things, sick bunch of individuals!
04:18 AM on 04/09/2012
I think people are missing the overall issue here. The problem is that the state lacks adequate security protocols, which is and has been a problem for some time. They actually had the right security, but as they say, a chain is only as strong as its weakest link, and having a password like "asdf", "password" or "12345" is about as stupid as leaving your key in the hole @ your house with a sign that says "please come rob me!". How can a government entity be THIS inept?! I think that the recent hacks and whatnot are only mere examples of the shoddy jobs that these corporations/state & local governments/etc. are doing in terms of protecting our private info, so they either need to get their acts together & stop bein' so cheap or just give up!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sardeth Wynn
When its "Foolproof", nature builds a better Fool
04:14 AM on 04/09/2012
Well my sites just got defaced yesterday, the trouble with hackers like this EjRam Team is they use proxies so getting an IP doesn't really catch them.
Oddly though with this new bill that some are calling "The Son of SOPA" coming out and the State that got hit.......one has to question the timing of it. Too ... ummm .... well lets just call it prefect.
03:24 AM on 04/09/2012
better to know it....?
05:04 PM on 04/08/2012
We have spent so much money on TSA and wars and nonsense that we are trying to live in the real world with ancient computer systems that should have been replaced decades ago.
11:29 AM on 04/08/2012
I have a good Idea, ANYONE how hacks or helps them when caught, and no EXCUSES ( I did not know BS ) 25 years in jail , PERIOD , lets see if these punks want to become someone wife in jail
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jukesgrrl
Hands off SS, Medicare & Medicaid
09:00 PM on 04/08/2012
Most of these "punks" live on the other side of the globe. How do you intend to catch them and try them in this country?
09:58 AM on 04/08/2012
Put people in jail for long time if they use some SS munber that is not theirs.
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linton
Perseverance is one short race after another.
10:35 AM on 04/08/2012
X4 on that. The punishment must be a severe deterrent.
11:30 AM on 04/08/2012
Remember ILLEGALS do that, Obama would NEVER go for that
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
SimianNation
Progressive NOT Regressive
02:29 PM on 04/08/2012
Too much agent orange?
09:53 AM on 04/08/2012
Could this be the Stuxnet Virus?
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ethelmertzrules
Repetition doesn't make it true
10:34 AM on 04/08/2012
If it were, they wouldn't know about the theft. Stuxnet mimics "all systems normal".
09:44 AM on 04/08/2012
One can get a free credit report annually three times, I check mine periodically, looking for those tell tale signs of things like addresses I have never lived at, etc., nothing can 100% protect anyone in this age of electronic information, but one can try and nip it in the bud!;-)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Itsmeeveryone
Class warfare!
09:37 AM on 04/08/2012
Oh well, it's just poor people in Utah.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jordan Kratz
08:56 AM on 04/08/2012
Or this will never be explained but it will be used to justify the awful Cyber Security Bills being rammed down our throats in Washington.
Since I have ZERO APPROVAL of the Corporations Are People Government and they are building the largest Spy Center so all of our Online things can be scrutinized.
I will just side with the wacko conspiracy theorists on this until I see some real criminals.
You should all be paying attention to the new SOPA/PIPA called CISPA and will prove to be worse.
http://www.reddit.com/r/technology/comments/rxvq6/worse_than_sopa_new_bill_cispa_could_even_shut/
NSA SPY Center
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2012/03/ff_nsadatacenter/all/1
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ethelmertzrules
Repetition doesn't make it true
10:37 AM on 04/08/2012
Careful now, the only people who call conspiracies theories are the conspirators. Whatever ideas are the most suppressed are most likely to be the truth.
lqw
Justmyopinion
08:52 AM on 04/08/2012
SS# sold for as much as $2500 each to illegals.
http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2012/jan/11/arrests-in-puerto-rico-us-in-document-fraud-case/
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KC-CAJUN
Nobody goes there anymore--it's too crowded. -YB
08:24 AM on 04/08/2012
I'm going to propose to our lawmakers that hackers who steal money should receive the same punishment as an armed robber. A slap on the wrist and a few years in a country-club fed prison is a joke.
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ethelmertzrules
Repetition doesn't make it true
10:38 AM on 04/08/2012
Only rich Republicans get to go to country-club fed prisons. If the hackers are poor they will go to the same hell holes as your average poor robber.
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KC-CAJUN
Nobody goes there anymore--it's too crowded. -YB
03:45 PM on 04/08/2012
Rich Republicans? Sorry, Republicans don't have a monopoly on fed prisons.