The Province

Cyberattac­k’s going global

It started in Ukraine and spread into U.S.

- RAPHAEL SATTER

PARIS — A new and highly virulent outbreak of malicious data-scrambling software appears to be causing mass disruption across the world, hitting companies and government­s in Europe especially hard.

Officials in Ukraine reported serious intrusions of the country’s power grid as well as at banks and government offices, where one senior executive posted a photo of a darkened computer screen and the words, “the whole network is down.” The prime minister cautioned that the country’s “vital systems” hadn’t been affected.

Russia’s Rosneft oil company also reported falling victim to hacking and said it had narrowly avoided major damage, as did Danish shipping giant A.P. Moller-Maersk.

“We are talking about a cyberattac­k,” said Anders Rosendahl, a spokesman for the Copenhagen-based shipping group. “It has affected all branches of our business, at home and abroad.”

The attack was confirmed to have spread beyond Europe when U.S. drugmaker Merck, based in New Jersey, said its systems had also been compromise­d.

The number of companies and agencies reportedly affected by the ransomware campaign was piling up fast, and the electronic rampage appeared to be rapidly snowballin­g into a worldwide crisis.

Victor Zhora, CEO of Infosafe IT in Kyiv, says he believed the ransomware, which attacks Microsoft operating systems from Windows XP to Windows 10, was previously seeded and time-activated.

“It seems the virus is spreading all over Europe and I’m afraid it can harm the whole world,” he said.

Zhora said the ransomware demands $300 in Bitcoin.

“A massive ransomware campaign is currently unfolding worldwide,” said Romanian cybersecur­ity company Bitdefende­r, where analyst Bogdan Botezatu said that it appeared to be nearly identical to GoldenEye, one of a family of hostage-taking programs that has been circulatin­g for months. Some analysts were calling the new form of ransomware Petya.

It’s not clear whether or why the ransomware has suddenly become so much more potent, but Botezatu said that it was likely spreading automatica­lly across a network, without the need for human interactio­n. Such self-spreading software, often called “worms,” are particular­ly feared because they can replicate rapidly, like a contagious disease.

“It’s like somebody sneezing into a train full of people,” Botezatu told The Associated Press.

The world is still recovering from a previous outbreak of ransomware, called WannaCry or WannaCrypt, which spread rapidly using digital break-in tools originally created by the U.S. National Security Agency and recently leaked to the web.

“Data breaches and cyber hacks are one of the biggest risks facing business worldwide,” said Michelle Crorie, a partner at law firm Clyde & Co. who specialize­s in cybersecur­ity issues. “The WannaCry attack and now Petya clearly demonstrat­e that hackers do not discrimina­te which type of business they are targeting.”

 ?? — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Airport employees at Boryspil airport in Kiev deal Tuesday with a new and highly virulent outbreak of malicious software that has spread across Europe, targeting Microsoft operating systems in businesses and government­s.
— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Airport employees at Boryspil airport in Kiev deal Tuesday with a new and highly virulent outbreak of malicious software that has spread across Europe, targeting Microsoft operating systems in businesses and government­s.

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