DMV Opens Offices for Certain Services More than Week After Cyberattack
The Nevada Department of Motor Vehicles began offering limited in-person services after a cyberattack disrupted multiple state agencies, with walk-ins allowed for canceled appointments through mid-September.
- Nevada state offices and agencies have begun reopening some in-person DMV services on September 2, over a week after the August 24 cyberattack was discovered.
- The cyberattack led to a statewide network security incident that forced the suspension of many services, with ongoing FBI and Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency investigations limiting information sharing.
- Although the DMV reopened vehicle registration and titling offices and kiosks, driver license and ID-related transactions remain unavailable while online services partially resumed amid long lines and user difficulties.
- Governor Lombardo clarified no personal data was accessed yet residents await confirmation, while the state issued warnings about scams and established a recovery website providing twice-daily updates.
- The cyberattack underscores rising threats to government systems, with significant ongoing recovery efforts and no clear timeline for full service restoration, highlighting risks from insufficient security measures.
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37 Articles
DMV opens offices for certain services more than week after cyberattack
LAS VEGAS (KLAS) -- Nevada DMV offices are open and people are now able to access some services in-person and online after a cyberattack disrupted state agencies more than a week ago. In a post on social media Tuesday morning, the DMV announced some of its online services are now available. In a second post, Tuesday afternoon, DMV said it was now open for registration, titling, and other vehicle-related services, and all those who had appointmen…
Nevada Government Offices Still Reeling From Cyberattack, System Outage
(Las Vegas, NV) — Government offices across Nevada are still dealing with a network outage caused by a major ransomware attack. Monday marked the start of week two of the issues. Public-facing offices were scheduled to be closed for Labor Day anyway. But, several state government websites remain limited or completely offline. State officials say the response plan they activated on August 24th took multiple systems offline. Nevada DMV offices and…
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