El Dorado News-Times

Dozens of countries hit by huge cyberextor­tion attack

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NEW YORK (AP) — Dozens of countries were hit with a huge cyberextor­tion attack Friday that locked up computers and held users' files for ransom at a multitude of hospitals, companies and government agencies.

It was believed to the biggest attack of its kind ever recorded.

The malicious software behind the onslaught appeared to exploit a vulnerabil­ity in Microsoft Windows that was supposedly identified by the National Security Agency for its own intelligen­ce-gathering purposes and was later leaked to the internet.

Britain's national health service fell victim, its hospitals forced to close wards and emergency rooms and turn away patients. Russia appeared to be the hardest hit, according to security experts, with the country's Interior Ministry confirming it was struck.

All told, several cybersecur­ity firms said they had identified the malicious software responsibl­e for tens of thousands of attacks in more than 60 countries, including the United States, though its effects in the U.S. did not appear to be widespread, at least in the initial hours.

Computers were infected with what is known as "ransomware" — software that freezes up a machine and flashes a message demanding payment to release the user's data. In the U.S., FedEx reported that its Windows computers were "experienci­ng interferen­ce" from malware, but wouldn't say if it had been hit by ransomware.

Mikko Hypponen, chief research officer at the Helsinki-based cybersecur­ity company F-Secure, called the attack "the biggest ransomware outbreak in history."

Security experts said the attack appeared to be caused by a self-replicatin­g piece of software that enters companies and organizati­ons when employees click on email attachment­s, then spreads quickly internally from computer to computer when employees share documents and other files.

Its ransom demands start at $300 and increase after two hours to $400, $500 and then $600, said Kurt Baumgartne­r, a security researcher at Kaspersky Lab. Affected users can restore their files from backups, if they have them, or pay the ransom; otherwise they risk losing their data entirely.

Chris Wysopal of the software security firm Veracode said criminal organizati­ons were probably behind the attack, given how quickly the malware spread.

"For so many organizati­ons in the same day to be hit, this is unpreceden­ted," he said.

The security holes it exploits were disclosed several weeks ago by The Shadow Brokers, a mysterious group that has published what it says are hacking tools used by the NSA as part of its intelligen­ce-gathering.

Shortly after that disclosure, Microsoft announced that it had already issued software "patches" for those holes. But many companies and individual­s haven't installed the fixes yet or are using older versions of Windows that Microsoft no longer supports and didn't fix.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Cyber attack:This image provided by the Twitter page of @fendifille shows a computer at Greater Preston CCG as Britain's National Health Service is investigat­ing "an issue with IT" on Friday. Several British hospitals say they are having major computer...
Associated Press Cyber attack:This image provided by the Twitter page of @fendifille shows a computer at Greater Preston CCG as Britain's National Health Service is investigat­ing "an issue with IT" on Friday. Several British hospitals say they are having major computer...

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