News

For the second day, a steady stream of St. Paul employees streamed in and out of Roy Wilkins Auditorium, which had been ...
Hackers post 43 gigabytes of St. Paul data after city refuses to pay ransom originally appeared on Bring Me The News. Mayor ...
The files posted "appear to come largely from a single shared network drive" used by the Parks and Recreation Department, St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter said on Monday evening.
On Sunday, St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter said they were contacted with a specific demand for a specific ransom amount.
A ransomware attack is what prompted St. Paul officials to proactively shut down the city's information systems more than two ...
The hackers who attacked St. Paul’s city computer system about two weeks ago dumped their stolen data online Monday after the city refused to pay an unspecified ransom. On Monday, the city said the ...
St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter is providing an update to the media at 5:30 p.m. on Monday about the ransomware cyberattack that has caused problems for the city for more than two weeks.
The winner of the special election will take the seat and represent Ward 4 through the November 2028 election.
Over the next few days, about 3,500 city employees will be required to do an in-person password reset and device security ...
Officials have paid no ransom, instead shuttering their network to isolate the attack detected July 25. The city has been working with the FBI and Minnesota National Guard to secure systems and find ...
The city of St. Paul expects to begin putting its systems back online this week, after a ransomware attack forced it to shut ...