The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency June 16 organizations to apply  to the MOVEit Transfer web application to prevent ransomware attackers from exploiting a critical vulnerability used to steal data. The FBI and CISA alerted organizations to the vulnerability last week.
 
鈥淭he notorious Russia-linked ransomware gang CLOP is exploiting previously unknown software flaws in MOVEit Transfer to target hospitals, health systems, corporations and government agencies, resulting in a serious ransomware threat against critical infrastructure,鈥 said John Riggi, AHA鈥檚 national advisor for cybersecurity and risk. 鈥淒ue to the scope and scale of organizations targeted, this strategic cyberthreat may be related to ongoing geopolitical tensions with Russia. The fact that the Russian security services do not cooperate with the U.S. and allied law enforcement agencies, provides a permissive environment for these Russia-based groups to operate from, with or without the explicit approval of the Russian government. It is strongly recommended that any instance of the MOVEit application be identified and that it be immediately disconnected from all networks and the internet until this threat is fully resolved. This is also a good opportunity to review all file transfer systems within your environments for necessity, security and patching.鈥 
 
For more information, see AHA鈥檚 Cybersecurity Advisory or contact Riggi at鈥. For the latest cyber and risk resources and threat intelligence, visit鈥aha.org/cybersecurity

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