INDIANAPOLIS — The Indianapolis Housing Agency says it has become the victim of a ransomware attack.
"In a ransomware attack, cybercriminals attempt to disrupt organizations by locking down the organization's computers and IT systems in exchange for the payment of a ransom," IHA wrote in a press release.
Sources tell WRTV Investigates computers and phones malfunctioned and IHA is trying to determine if any personal information was stolen.
IHA says it is investigating with the help of internal IT teams, external IT consultants and forensics experts. Law enforcement is also involved.
A city spokesperson released the following statement:
“The City remains in constant communication with IHA and will continue to do so as they assess the ongoing situation. The City of Indianapolis data infrastructure is separate from IHA’s servers, and from our review, is unaffected by the outage.”
-
McDonald's joins wave of US companies rolling back DEI policies
McDonald's is just the latest American company to begin sunsetting some of the company's diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives.The Girl Scouts are retiring two cookie flavors after this season
The Girl Scouts of the USA announced that the “S’mores” and “Toast-Yay!” cookies will be discontinued after this year.Trump announces $20B US investment by Emirati businessman for data centers
President-elect Donald Trump announced a $20 billion investment for data centers in the U.S. by an Emirati company led by billionaire Hussain Sajwani, a close business partner of the Trump family.Unified Mental Health Response Initiative to launch this month. What to know:
Indianapolis is set to launch the Unified Mental Health Response Initiative later this month, aimed at uniting IMPD, IFD, and IEMS for a coordinated response during mental health emergencies.