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JUST IN: Major US Airports Report Cyberattacks


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A senior official confirmed to ABC News that some of the nation’s largest airports have been targeted for cyberattacks.

The attacker is allegedly within the Russian Federation.

“Importantly, the systems targeted do not handle air traffic control, internal airline communications and coordination, or transportation security,” ABC News noted.

“It’s an inconvenience,” the source said.

“The attacks have resulted in targeted ‘denial of public access’ to public-facing web domains that report airport wait times and congestion.”

ABC News reported:

Over a dozen airport websites were impacted by the “denial of service” attack, John Hultquist, head of intelligence analysis at cybersecurity firm Mandian, told ABC News. That type of attack essentially overloads sites by jamming them with artificial users.

“Killnet,” a pro-Russian hacker group, is believed to be behind the attack, according to Hultquist. While similar groups have been found to be fronts for state-backed actors, Hultquist said there is no evidence the Russian government was involved in directing this attack.

The attacks were first reported around 3 a.m. ET when the Port Authority notified the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency that the LaGuardia Airport system had been hit. LaGuardia has been restored, but other airports around the country have subsequently been targeted.

The websites for Des Moines International Airport, Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) and Chicago O’Hare International Airport appeared impacted Monday morning.

Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport reported around 10:30 a.m. ET that its site is back up and running and that “at no time were operations at the airport impacted.”

“Early this morning, the FlyLAX.com website was partially disrupted,” LAX said in a statement to ABC News. “The service interruption was limited to portions of the public facing FlyLAX.com website only. No internal airport systems were compromised and there were no operational disruptions.”

The Hill added:

Last week, Killnet also claimed responsibility for knocking several U.S. state government websites offline, including in Colorado, Mississippi and Kentucky.

The hacking group posted on Telegram a list of state websites it planned to target with service disruptions. The list also included government pages from Florida, Alabama, Delaware and Hawaii, among other states.

The group also posted a photo on the channel captioned in English with “USA OFFLINE” and “F— NATO” over a graphic of a nuclear explosion surrounding the Statue of Liberty.

Killnet has also claimed responsibility for launching cyberattacks against NATO member countries including Estonia and Lithuania.



 

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