Deloitte Faces More Scrutiny After Cyber Breach in RI

State officials say how the hack happened remains under review

Gov. McKee, joined by other state officials, discusses fallout from the cyber attack
Gov. McKee, joined by other state officials, discusses fallout from the cyber attack
The Public’s Radio
Share
Gov. McKee, joined by other state officials, discusses fallout from the cyber attack
Gov. McKee, joined by other state officials, discusses fallout from the cyber attack
The Public’s Radio
Deloitte Faces More Scrutiny After Cyber Breach in RI
Copy

The state of Rhode Island is facing questions about its ongoing reliance on Deloitte after the personal information of hundreds of thousands of Rhode Islanders became potentially vulnerable during a recent cyber attack.

The hack was revealed late Friday and involves RI Bridges, the state’s portal for an array of health and public benefit programs.

How the breach happened remains the subject of an ongoing inquiry. Gov. Dan McKee has repeatedly urged Rhode Islanders who may be affected to protect themselves by taking the steps outlined on the state website cyberalert.ri.gov.

“We do not know yet the extent of data that the cyber-criminals have accessed,” the governor said, “but it could include Social Security numbers, date of birth and possibly banking information of anyone who has applied for or received benefits from services that are hosted by the RI Bridge program.”

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

McKenna Goldberg, 75, served nearly 30 years on the state’s top court
From bedazzled books to captivating hearts, The Little Bubblegum Bookshop is marketing to readers’ true desires
With schools closed across the region next week, here’s a roundup of family-friendly events to keep kids curious — and parents sane — all week long
Artist Heidi Whitman channels Moby-Dick to explore vengeance, gun violence and modern American unrest
The school committee ordered an investigation after four students were arrested late last year
The newly elected party chair outlines his strategy for expanding state GOP ranks and weighs in on energy costs, immigration enforcement and election integrity