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[171] 911 was down for all of New Hampshire. [180] [181] In addition, Alaska was experiencing issues with non-emergency call centres. [181] Many call centres switched to working backup systems. [166] The CM/ECF and PACER computer systems used by the US federal courts were unaffected. [182]
The Internet in Egypt was shut down by the government, whereby approximately 93% [41] of networks were without access in 2011 in an attempt to stop mobilization for anti-government protests. [42] ISPs: government censorship Egypt: Full 2012 2012 Syrian internet outage Syria: On 29 November 2012 the Syrian internet was cut off from the rest of ...
Multiple states reported disrupted services at department of motor vehicles offices Thursday in a "national outage" that halted license-related transactions due to "a loss in cloud connectivity."
[90] [91] Imperial County, in the U.S. state of California, computer systems are seized by hackers using Ryuk ransomware. [92] May: computer systems belonging to the City of Baltimore are seized by hackers using ransomware known as RobbinHood that encrypts files with a "file-locking" virus, as well as the tool EternalBlue. [93] [94] [95] [96]
CDK's systems first went down around 2:00 a.m. EDT (0600 GMT) and some functions began to come back online by Wednesday afternoon, according to a report by Bloomb CDK Global investigating cyber ...
McDonald's apologized Friday for a global technology outage that shuttered some restaurants for hours. The company said the outage was caused by a third-party technology provider and was not a ...
On September 13, 2009, TechCrunch reported Intuit would acquire Mint for $170 million. [17] An official announcement was made the following day. On November 2, 2009, Intuit announced its acquisition of Mint.com was complete. The former CEO of Mint.com, Aaron Patzer, was named vice president and general manager of Intuit's personal finance group, responsible for Mint.com and
The Climatic Research Unit email controversy (also known as "Climategate") [2] [3] began in November 2009 with the hacking of a server at the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) at the University of East Anglia (UEA) by an external attacker, [4] [5] copying thousands of emails and computer files (the Climatic Research Unit documents) to various internet locations several weeks before the Copenhagen ...