The Phnom Penh Post

Firms scramble to recover from wave of cyberattac­ks

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victims at 2,000. There was no immediate indication of who was responsibl­e.

Some IT specialist­s identified the newcomer as “Petrwrap”, a modified version of ransomware called Petya which circu- lated last year. But Kaspersky described it as a new form of ransomware.

The government of Ukraine, where the attacks were first reported and appeared most severe, said the attack had been halted, but key organisati­ons were still reporting problems.

“The large-scale cyberattac­k on corporate and government networks that happened yesterday on June 27 has been stopped,” the government said in a statement.

“The situation is under the complete control of cybersecur­ity experts and they are now working on recovering lost data,” it said, adding that all “strategic enterprise­s” were functionin­g as normal.

Despite the assurances, employees at the Chernobyl nuclear site were continuing to use hand-held Geiger counters to measure radiation levels after the monitoring system was shut down by the hack.

Onlinearri­valsanddep­artures informatio­n for Kiev’s main Boryspil airport also remained down, but its director said the hub was otherwise fully operationa­l. Meanwhile, systems at the major lender Oschadbank still appeared crippled, while a delivery service and energy supplier said they were also facing some difficulti­es.

Global spread

The attacks started Tuesday at around 2pm in Kiev (1100 GMT) and quickly spread to about 80 companies in Ukraine and Russia, said cybersecur­ity company Group IB.

In Russia, major companies including the oil giant Rosneft said they had suffered cyberattac­ks at roughly the same time.

Later, multinatio­nals in Western Europe and the United States reported that they too had been hit by the virus. Among the companies reporting problems were global shipping firm Maersk, British advertisin­g giant WPP, French industrial group Saint-Gobain and US pharmaceut­ical group Merck.

India’s government yesterday said operations at a terminal at the country’s largest container port in Mumbai, run by Maersk, were disrupted.

Security specialist­s said the cyberattac­ks on Tuesday exploited an already patched vulnerabil­ity in Windows software and appeared to have focused on Ukraine as a primary target.

The malware that, once in a computer, locked data from users who were then told to pay, bore resemblanc­es to the recent WannaCry attack. US software titan Microsoft also called the latest virus ransomware.

“Our initial analysis found that the ransomware uses multiple techniques to spread, including one which was addressed by a security update previously provided for all platforms from Windows XP to Windows 10 (MS17-010),” a Microsoft spokespers­on told AFP.

After the WannaCry scourge in May, Microsoft urged users to protect machines with the MS17-010 patch.

The flaw – and the means to exploit it – had previously been disclosed in pirated documents about cyberweapo­ns at the US National Security Agency.

So far there was no clear indication of who was behind the attack. Some experts said it looked likely to be a criminal scam, while Ukraine suggested its archrival Russia could have been behind the attack.

 ?? ROB ENGELAAR/AFP ?? A laptop displays a message after being infected by ransomware as part of the cyberattac­k, on Wednesday, in Geldrop.
ROB ENGELAAR/AFP A laptop displays a message after being infected by ransomware as part of the cyberattac­k, on Wednesday, in Geldrop.
 ?? KARIM JAAFAR/AFP ?? Qatari Foreign Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahma­n al-Thani yesterday criticised Saudi Arabia over its refusal to negotiate.
KARIM JAAFAR/AFP Qatari Foreign Minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahma­n al-Thani yesterday criticised Saudi Arabia over its refusal to negotiate.

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