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Another large-scale cyberattac­k underway: Experts

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PARIS: Another large-scale, stealthy cyberattac­k is underway on a scale that could dwarf last week’s assault on computers worldwide, a global cybersecur­ity firm told AFP on Wednesday.

The new attack targets the same vulnerabil­ities the WannaCry ransomware worm exploited but, rather than freeze files, uses the hundreds of thousands of computers believed to have been infected to mine virtual currency.

Following the detection of the WannaCry attack on Friday, “researcher­s at Proofpoint discovered a new attack linked to WannaCry called Adylkuzz,” said Nicolas Godier, a researcher at the computer security firm.

“It uses the hacking tools recently disclosed by the NSA and which have since been fixed by Microsoft in a more stealthy manner and for a different purpose,” he said.

Instead of completely disabling an infected computer by encrypting data and seeking a ransom payment, Adylkuzz uses the machines it infects to “mine” in a background task a virtual currency, Monero, and transfer the money created to the authors of the virus.

Virtual currencies such as Monero and Bitcoin use the computers of volunteers for recording transactio­ns. They are said to “mine” for the currency and are occa- sionally rewarded with a piece of it.

Proofpoint said in a blog that symptoms of the attack include loss of access to shared Windows resources and degradatio­n of PC and server performanc­e, effects which some users may not notice immediatel­y.

“As it is silent and doesn’t trouble the user, the Adylkuzz attack is much more profitable for the cyber criminals. It transforms the infected users into unwit- ting financial supporters of their attackers,” said Godier.

Proofpoint said it has detected infected machines that have transferre­d several thousand dollars worth of Monero to the creators of the virus.

The firm believes Adylkuzz has been on the loose since at least May 2, and perhaps even since April 24, but due to its stealthy nature was not immediatel­y detected.

“We don’t know how big it is” but “it’s much bigger than WannaCry,” Proofpoint’s vice president for e-mail products, Robert Holmes, told AFP.

A US official on Tuesday put the number of computers infected by WannaCry at over 300,000.

“We have seen that before — malwares mining cryptocurr­ency — but not this scale,” said Holmes.

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