Stryker says cyberattack on its network contained


The logo of Stryker medical technology is seen on their plant in the IDA (Industrial Development Agency) estate, in Carrigtwohill, County Cork, Ireland March 28, 2025. REUTERS/Clodagh Kilcoyne

March 17 (Reuters) - Medical ⁠device maker Stryker said on Tuesday ⁠it has contained a cyberattack that ‌caused widespread disruption to its business and was now prioritizing restoring systems that directly support customers, ordering and ​shipping.

A cyberattack on March 11 ⁠had affected Stryker's ⁠operations, hindering order processing, manufacturing and shipments. An ⁠Iran-linked ‌hacking group called Handala claimed responsibility for the attack the same ⁠day, claiming it was retaliation for a ​strike ‌on a girls' school in Minab, southern ⁠Iran.

Stryker's staff ​found that cellphones, laptops and other remote devices that were running Microsoft's Windows operating system ⁠and could connect to its ​computer platforms had been impacted by the attack.

No patient-related services and connected medical products were ⁠affected, the company noted, though it did not reveal details on the financial impact of the attack.

Stryker, which has 56,000 employees ​and operates in 61 ⁠countries, said it is coordinating with appropriate authorities ​and external cybersecurity experts ‌as part of its investigation ​into the incident.

(Reporting by Christy Santhosh in Bengaluru; Editing by Jonathan Ananda)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

OpenAI to sell AI to US agencies through Amazon cloud unit, the Information reports
Chipmaker Qualcomm unveils $20 billion stock buyback program
Mastercard to buy stablecoin infra firm BVNK for up to $1.8 billion
Amazon launches 1-hour shipping in US cities to challenge Walmart
Where censored words find a safe haven: Inside Minecraft
Trustpilot profit quadruples as review platform emerges as 'AI winner'
Citigroup cuts 12-month bitcoin, ether targets as US crypto legislation stalls
Working in AI lifted their compensation. Now they want prenups.
Britain sets rules for final phase of fibre broadband roll-out
Xbox Play Anywhere Showcase highlights five promising gems

Others Also Read