Hospitals ask cloud storage company to hand over stolen data hosted on its servers

Hospital
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Two hospitals that suffered ransomware attacks have discovered their data is being stored by a cloud storage provider.

The hospitals are now asking the courts to force Wasabi Technologies to hand over the stolen information, so that they can look to verify exactly what data was taken.

Not the first hospitals to be targeted

The two hospitals based in New York operate on a not-for-profit model and founded the North Star Health Alliance which provides healthcare to 220,000 people in the northern New York area.

Carthage Area Hospital and Claxton-Hepburn Medical Center suffered attacks by LockBit, a ransomware gang who have targeted a number of hospitals in the US and Europe over the holiday period, causing chaos, diverting patients and requiring a large amount of care rescheduling.

As part of an investigation into the stolen data, the hospitals discovered information relating to the stolen data stored on the servers of a cloud storage platform run by Wasabi Technologies.

Speaking to 7News, North Star Health Alliance CEO Richard Duvall said, “So the best option explored by our legal team and working with the FBI is actually going after that company to get our secluded data so that we can be sure what information was leaked.”

The LockBit gang has been operating a ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) since as early as 2019 which has been used to target a wide range of victims on an international scale, with estimates suggesting that since 2020, at least $91 million has been stolen from U.S. based organizations.

In a statement to TechRadar Pro, the company said "Wasabi is committed to complying with all relevant regulatory requests. It is our policy not to comment on ongoing legal matters."

Via BleepingComputer

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Benedict Collins
Senior Writer, Security

Benedict has been with TechRadar Pro for over two years, and has specialized in writing about cybersecurity, threat intelligence, and B2B security solutions. His coverage explores the critical areas of national security, including state-sponsored threat actors, APT groups, critical infrastructure, and social engineering.

Benedict holds an MA (Distinction) in Security, Intelligence, and Diplomacy from the Centre for Security and Intelligence Studies at the University of Buckingham, providing him with a strong academic foundation for his reporting on geopolitics, threat intelligence, and cyber-warfare.

Prior to his postgraduate studies, Benedict earned a BA in Politics with Journalism, providing him with the skills to translate complex political and security issues into comprehensible copy.