CISA urges companies to secure Microsoft Intune systems after hackers mass-wipe Stryker devices
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) has warned companies to secure systems for managing their fleets of employee devices after pro-Iran hackers broke into medical tech giant Stryker and mass-wiped thousands of its phones, tablets, and computers.
Among the advice, CISA said network administrators should ensure that certain user accounts that have access to systems like Microsoft Intune, which Stryker uses to remotely manage its employees’ devices, can only make sensitive or high-impact changes (such as wiping devices) with a second administrator’s approval.
Stryker has since said it contained the cyberattack and is restoring its systems.
While the company’s medical devices remain operational, Stryker said its supply, ordering, and shipping systems remain offline. Stryker has not given a timeline for its recovery. The company did not respond to TechCrunch’s request for comment. A group of pro-Iran hacktivists, known as Handala, took credit for the cyberattack on Stryker last week, saying it hacked the company in retaliation for the U. killing of dozens of children in an air strike on a school in Iran.
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