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A group that has claimed responsibility for a flood of cyberattacks on the nation's biggest banks says it was behind an assault last week on the website of American Express (AXP) that left customers of the credit card giant unable to log in to their accounts.
April 2 -
Wells Fargo (WFC) weathered a cyberattack on Tuesday that left some of the company's customers unable to log in to their accounts.
March 26 -
Though JPMorgan Chase and BB&T are the only big banks to confirm a denial of service attack on Tuesday, roughly a half dozen institutions endured digital assaults at around the same time, according to the security firm Radware.
March 13
Wells Fargo (WFC) on Thursday endured the second cyberattack the company has acknowledged in as many weeks.
The digital assault on the nation’s fourth-biggest bank jammed online and mobile banking and left some customers unable to log in to their accounts.
"We're experiencing a denial of service attack, which is a deliberate attempt to disrupt website access by flooding a site with traffic, similar to a cyber traffic jam," Wells Fargo wrote on the company’s
Wells Fargo also took to
The website
The attack comes nine days after Well Fargo suffered a similar attack. American Express (AXP) and BB&T (BBT) have weathered denial of service attacks in the past week as well. KeyCorp (KEY) also said its websites had experienced intermittent slowdowns.
Electronic assaults also bogged down online banking in March at
The al-Qassam Cyber Fighters, a group of hacktivists who have claimed responsibility for a string of denial of service attacks on some of world’s largest financial institutions, in an email Tuesday threatened attacks on six financial institutions. Though the missive omitted mention of Wells Fargo, the group has previously