Austin American-Statesman

New cyberattac­k wallops Europe, seems to slow in U.S.

- By Raphael Satter

PARIS— A new and highly virulent outbreak of data-scrambling software caused disruption across the world Tuesday. Following a similar attack in May , the fresh assault paralyzed some hos- pitals, government offices and major multinatio­nal corporatio­ns in a dramatic demonstrat­ion of how easily malicious programs can bring daily life to a halt.

Ukraine and other parts of Europe were hit particular­ly hard by the new strain of ransomware — malicious software that locks up computer files with all-but-unbreakabl­e encryption and then demands a ransom for its release. As the malware began to spread across the United States, it affected companies such as the drugmaker Merck and Mondelez Internatio­nal, the owner of food brands such as Oreo and Nabisco. But its pace appeared to slow as the day wore on.

The origins of the malware remain unclear. Researcher­s picking the program apart found evidence its creators had borrowed from leaked National Security Agency code, raising the possibilit­y that the digital havoc had spread using U.S. taxpayer-funded tools.

“The virus is spreading all over Europe and I’m afraid it can harm the whole world,” said Victor Zhora, the chief executive of Infosafe IT in Kiev, Ukraine, where reports of the malicious software first emerged earlier on Tuesday.

In Ukraine, victims included top-level government offices, where officials posted photos of darkened computer screens, energy companies, banks and even cash machines, gas stations, and supermarke­ts. Multinatio­nal companies, including the global law firm DLA Piper and Danish shipping giant A.P. Moller-Maersk were also affected, although the firms didn’t specify the extent of the damage.

In the U.S., a hospital in western Pennsylvan­ia said it was dealing with a “wide- spread” cyberattac­k, but didn’t immediatel­y release further details.

Security experts said Tuesday’s global cyberat- tack shares something in common with last month’s outbreak of ransomware, dubbed WannaCry: Both spread using digital lock picks originally created by the NSA and later published to the web by a still-mysterious group known as the Shadowbrok­ers.

Security vendors including Bitdefende­r and Kaspersky said the NSA exploit, known as EternalBlu­e, is allowing malware to spread rapidly by itself across internal computer networks at compa- nies and other large orga- nizations. Microsoft issued a security fix in March, but Chris Wysopal, chief tech- nology officer at the security firm Veracode, warned that would only be effective if 100 percent of computers on a company’s network were patched, saying that if one computer were infected, the malware could use a backup mechanism to spread to patched computers as well.

Bogdan Botezatu, an analyst with Bitdefende­r, compared such self-spreading software, often called “worms,” to a contagious disease.

“It’s like somebody sneezing into a train full of people,” Botezatu said. “You just have to exist there and you’re vulnerable.”

Aside from its method of propagatio­n, the malware was different from WannaCry. Botezatu said the new program appeared to be nearly identical to GoldenEye, itself a variant of a known family of hostage-taking programs known as “Petya.”

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