MGM Resorts International recently revealed that it’s business as usual as they are back up and running after ten days of chaos due to a cyberattack against their systems.
Most hotel and casino services at MGM Resorts International have already been restored after a ransomware attack that disrupted its websites, credit card machines, ATMs, slot machines, room key systems, and online reservations, SiliconAngle reports.
Yes, you need a password manager. But it doesn’t have to be overly complex.
IronNet, a McLean, Virginia cybersecurity firm, is in the midst of financial trouble, according to a recent filing.
Services at hotels and casinos owned by MGM Resorts International Inc. have been at least mostly restored following a ransomware attack that crippled services provided by the company last week.
Caesars paid. That’s one of the few important things we know so far about the two recent cyberattacks on the two largest casino operators in Las Vegas.
MGM Resorts brought to an end a 10-day computer shutdown prompted by efforts to shield from a cyberattack data including hotel reservations and credit card processing, the casino giant said Wednesday, as analysts and academics measured the effects of the event.
Cyberattacks that victimized major resort companies on the Las Vegas Strip this month are a strong reminder to stakeholders to protect their operations from the evolving online threats, an industry expert said.
In a series of social media updates this week, MGM Resorts said its hotel and casinos were “operating normally,” but cybersecurity experts and public comments suggest otherwise.