Illinois College, Hit By Ransomware Attack, To Shut Down (nbcnews.com) 58
Lincoln College is scheduled to close its doors Friday, becoming the first U.S. institution of higher learning to shut down in part due to a ransomware attack. From a report: A goodbye note posted to the school's website said that it survived both World Wars, the Spanish flu and the Great Depression, but was unable to handle the combination of the Covid pandemic and a severe ransomware attack in December that took months to remedy. "Lincoln College was a victim of a cyberattack in December 2021 that thwarted admissions activities and hindered access to all institutional data, creating an unclear picture of Fall 2022 enrollment projections," the school wrote in its announcement. "All systems required for recruitment, retention, and fundraising efforts were inoperable. Fortunately, no personal identifying information was exposed. Once fully restored in March 2022, the projections displayed significant enrollment shortfalls, requiring a transformational donation or partnership to sustain Lincoln College beyond the current semester." The Illinois school, which is named after President Abraham Lincoln and broke ground on his birthday in 1865, is one of only a handful of rural American colleges that qualify as predominantly Black institutions by the Department of Education.
Sure (Score:1, Troll)
This reminds me when my local butcher shop in Denver closed after 47 years in business and blamed it on 9/11.
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If so I can see how, if Muslims were laying low and didn't want to be seen going in there.
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No.
Just a regular shop.
And, the closure was in 2004.
Re:Sure (Score:5, Insightful)
Except that it's entirely probable that they might have survived the pandemic (just barely), but that the ransomware attack was just too much. Makes me angry how there are some people that just want to destroy. Such a waste.
Re:Sure (Score:5, Insightful)
I agree that there's not much they could have done about the lockdowns, but there could be lessons here for:
* an over-aggressive covid policy
* backups
* testing backups
* not denying the IT people the budget for backups
* not denying the IT people the budget for security
* running Windows everywhere
* running Windows without continuous backups
* a DR plan that provides for continuity without IT systems (this was big when I was in healthcare disaster planning, for obvious reasons)
* not having the requisite insurance to cover an attack
* not being subject to insurance oversight to help prevent an attack
Yeah, the ransomware gang lit the match, but usually these are piles of tinder waiting to go up.
Is it victim-blaming? Yeah, and sometimes that's appropriate. The ability to recover from a ransomware attack is a known practice.
This will make a fine case study to help prevent another similar incident from happening again. I feel really bad for all the students, faculty, staff, and alumni who will be quite harmed by the poor decisions of just a few bad actors.
Re:Sure (Score:4, Informative)
If you are properly prepared it might only cost $100k to recover, but an average I heard for a company with 200-500 employees thrown about was $350k for the IT portion and about the same for the legal and administrative portion of recovery. The time component is also a huge issue-- recovery takes time out of other priorities.
Re:Sure (Score:5, Informative)
This is getting to a point where there needs to be some sort of federal, coordinated effort to harden infrastructure across the board; otherwise small players will continue to get destroyed because they don't have a $2 million IT budget.
In this case, it's an extremely marginalized community resource that was already under duress that has been lost, and cannot be easily replaced.
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This... completely. I actually did some consulting work for them a few years back (around 5 years ago) and even then we called out backup and DR as a risk. They knew it was a risk but all they could do was take recommendations to the board.
Sad... and unfortunately in the end inevitable.
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It's probable that a ransomware attack is an excuse to close the doors of a failing institution.
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I used to own a business....and your post is the real story.
I owned a print shop. I could get an idea of how a business was doing, based on what they ordered from me (and how they paid). I knew when someone was in trouble.
The reasons they would give for going out of business were always just the immediate issues. The real reasons were always evident much earlier.
Pro-tip- if business every says, "our credit card system is down right now" that 99% of the time means they are having problems with the bank,
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Cheap is relative, I guess. Backblaze, for example, wants $14,000/yr to keep a couple of hundred computers backed up. That doesn't factor in server backups, IT support, or additional security systems and software designed to prevent an issue. Nor does it factor in the costs of actually recovering from a breach and re-securing and re-downloading all of those systems.
I mean, I get what you're saying when compared to the total net worth of the business, but I can also see where a marginal business might flinch
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Re:Sure (Score:4, Interesting)
Shipping meat became expensive, and slow, after 9/11. For a butcher shop reliant on prompt deliveries, as well as for fish restaurants around the globe, 9/11 was devastating.
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It raised shipping prices considerably, and shipping delays as airports increased cargo inspections and revised their security. Similar price increases occurred durig he air traffic controller's strike in the 1980's. If you live near a seaport, it may have helped lower local prices temporarily.
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Mackenzie Bezos Donations (Score:1)
Considering the amount she has donated to these types of organizations, it seems odd that this one got skipped, if all it needed
was a "transformational donation or partnership". I find it hard to believe that they didn't solicit her. If they didn't, they're idiots. If they
did...she may have seen it as a poor choice to "invest" in.
There's probably more to it's failure...possibly that it's a "rural American college" that wasn't in the best competitive position.
Look at it on a map...it's in a small town in
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This reminds me when my local butcher shop in Denver closed after 47 years in business and blamed it on 9/11.
Lincoln College is an institution, something that has been in existence since the time of Abraham Lincoln. That makes it different from your friendly neighborhood butcher, who could close for any reason, a chain supermarket opening across the street, the grand kids not being interested in continuing the business, or the owner simply getting bored.
The college I presume still has buildings, which would be unaffected by the pandemic or ransomware attack. Surely that should count for something, say, as collate
I don't buy this (Score:3, Interesting)
Fortunately, no personal identifying information was exposed.
I have read this from many organizations that have been hit by ransomware and I have a hard time believing they can back it up.
I know first hand from a company I worked for that they carefully worded all of their statements such that in a legal sense they were saying they hadn't found any evidence that personal info had been taken, not that they ere sure it hadn't. If some group has enough access to your network to fully inventory it, long enough to backdoor pretty much all of your critical servers, how can you possibly know what they did or didn't move off your network? Just because they haven't published it doesn't mean they didn't take it.
Evidence (Score:2)
I can see a scenario where an enterprise detects that a ransomware attack is in progress, and literally pulls the plug immediately. If they don't see a spike in outgoing traffic, odds are the attackers were probably not able to pull a signifgant amount of data off of their servers. From what I understand, ransomware attacks generally encrypt everything and ransom the decryption key, so stealth is of upmost importance. If a network op notices a ton of data going to some random IP it's going to raise suspicio
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Haven't some of the recent ransomware also threaten to release company info if a ransom isn't paid?
That implies they also copy data, before they encrypt everything. The groups threaten to leak sensitive info if ransom isn't paid. Sort of putting pressure on the victims to pay.
Attack Vectors (Score:1)
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Maybe disguised as a coupon.
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It's not a big school...so not a lot of machines to propagate to. It's only 800 students, so the administration is probably just (I dunno) a few dozen people? So, probably fewer administrative computers than you'd think...
But really, it likely hit their accounting system, which could just be a handful, or (eek) even one machine...and they probably no longer have any concept of which students owe them, and how much. With the levels of individual financial aid involved, I'm sure the accounting is messy.
If
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lets pretend the modern world isn't reliant on technology! weee!
Skyscrapers, DNA structure, protein sequencing, submarines, intercontinental air traffic, nuclear reactions, manned trips to the Moon and back.
All were conceived, engineered, and produced by people whose first 25 years of teaching/learning overwhelmingly consisted of scratching a pointy white rock against a flat green rock, with no glowing screens anywhere in their schools or homes. And the basic underpinning sciences were often constructed by people who wore togas, or powdered wigs, believed in Prophets ri
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> The modern world may be "reliant on technology", but human minds learn concepts via observing the world while guided by other human minds. Do you think the average USA public high school grad who has a Chromebook and a GoogleDocs account and a Pearson LMS module, would be able to give a fundamentally stronger explanation of the relationships between radians, degrees, the unit circle, and the graphs of the basic trig functions, than an average student from 1990, or 1970, who used graph paper and protrac
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> The modern world may be "reliant on technology", but human minds learn concepts via observing the world while guided by other human minds. Do you think the average USA public high school grad who has a Chromebook and a GoogleDocs account and a Pearson LMS module, would be able to give a fundamentally stronger explanation of the relationships between radians, degrees, the unit circle, and the graphs of the basic trig functions, than an average student from 1990, or 1970, who used graph paper and protractors and direct instruction from someone who spent hours with them every day for a year or more?
That stuff's great to do on paper.
But I can guarantee you the light bulb goes on quicker for students I show linear regression in Desmos and have them fritter around fitting real data than those who work through it in a textbook and direct-instruction-heavy environment.
Of course, this is all besides the point: the college was having trouble admitting and enrolling students and fundraising without their technology infrastructure, not offering instruction.
I agree with you. But the complexity of the admissions/enrollment process is a result of state mandates tied to auditing and funding, federal mandates tied to auditing and funding, accreditation-body mandates tied to auditing and funding, grant/fellowship criteria tied to auditing and funding, etc. To me, the salient point of the original comment is that the higher ed industry has accumulated an unsustainable amount of cruft and administrative overhead during the past 20 years. We're not reliant on the tech
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How long does your Fox LSD high last?
Humiliation for IT department (Score:1)
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Fire a few administrators, problem solved (Score:1)
If they're anything like almost every other college and university in the US they can just fire a couple of the useless corrupt do-nothing "administrators" pulling in enormous salaries and they'll have a large budget surplus in no time.
Lets assume this story is true (Score:1)
My guess is that there were no backups, or at least no useful backups, and that nothing was secured or protected.
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Well, duh. It's a small, poor, rural college. Resources for that kind of thing are limited. And some greedy asshole targetted them.
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So, (Score:1)
my Lincoln College Cyber Security degree must now be worth squat.
Illinois College (Score:3, Interesting)
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Re:Illinois College (Score:4)
Well, let's see here.
Andrew Jackson, a Democrat, not only massacred Native Americans, but was responsible for the Trail of Tears, in defiance of the Supreme Court.
And we all know how the Southern Democrats started a war with the rest of the country to continue slavery.
And even a hundred years later, it was Republicans who passed the Civil Rights Act. And George Wallace, a Democrat, who said, "Segregation yesterday, segregation today, segregation tomorrow." And in spite of this, he not only remained a Democrat in good standing, but active in politics well into the 1980s.
And Hillary Clinton eulogized Robert Byrd, a grand dragon of the KKK, in 2007.
And during his term, President Trump, a Republican, overturned the laws which created drug sentencing disparities between whites and blacks.
And our current President was sued, and lost, because he issued Covid relief payments on the basis of race. And he openly stated that he would chose the next Supreme Court justice based not on her qualifications, but on her race.
It's not like the Republicans are angels - this is politics, after all. But while the Democrat social policy objectives sounded good, I never could stomach the fact that the cost of progressive social policy was electing people who were openly racist, and used social policy as a tool to oppress blacks and minorities. I get it - some of you will invariably ask, "But how does that affect me?" I don't have an easy answer for you, because you'll never have to navigate the morass of government bureaucracy, but I can tell you that if you're voting for Democrats, you're part of the legacy of slavery and racism in this country. Maybe you believe in progressive ideals, but if so, perhaps you ought to consider forming your own party which doesn't come with the baggage of the Democratic party.
When we talk of "the legacy of slavery and jim crow..." we're talking about the history of the Democratic party in America. And unfortunately, Illinois is still run by the Democratic party. Maybe you didn't know this, but both Chicago and Illinois have race-based preferential treatment systems in place. I could wax on about how preferential treatment based on race is used by government to ensure resentment between peoples of different races.
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College (Score:1)