The Day

Trump administra­tion blames N. Korea for ransomware attack

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Washington (AP) — President Donald Trump’s administra­tion is publicly blaming North Korea for a ransomware attack that infected hundreds of thousands of computers worldwide in May and crippled parts of Britain’s National Health Service.

Homeland security adviser Tom Bossert wrote in a Wall Street Journal op-ed published Monday night that North Korea was “directly responsibl­e” for the WannaCry ransomware attack and that Pyongyang will be held accountabl­e for it.

Bossert said the administra­tion’s finding of responsibi­lity is based on evidence and confirmed by other government­s and private companies, including the United Kingdom and Microsoft.

“North Korea has acted especially badly, largely unchecked, for more than a decade, and its malicious behavior is growing more egregious. WannaCry was indiscrimi­nately reckless,” he wrote.

Bossert said the Trump administra­tion will continue to use its “maximum pressure strategy to curb Pyongyang’s ability to mount attacks, cyber or otherwise.”

The WannaCry attack struck more than 150 nations in May, locking up digital documents, databases and other files and demanding a ransom for their release.

It battered Britain’s National Health Service, where the cyberattac­k froze computers at hospitals across the country, closing emergency rooms and bringing medical treatment to a halt. Government offices in Russia, Spain, and several other countries were disrupted, as were Asian universiti­es, Germany’s national railway and global companies such as automakers Nissan and Renault.

The WannaCry ransomware exploited a vulnerabil­ity in mostly older versions of Microsoft’s Windows operating system. Affected computers had generally not been patched with security fixes that would have blocked the attack. Security experts, however, traced the exploitati­on of that weakness back to the U.S. National Security Agency; it was part of a cache of stolen NSA cyberweapo­ns publicly released by a group of hackers known as the Shadow Brokers.

Microsoft president Brad Smith likened the theft to “the U.S. military having some of its Tomahawk missiles stolen,” and argued that intelligen­ce agencies should disclose such vulnerabil­ities rather than hoarding them.

WannaCry came to a screeching halt thanks to enterprisi­ng work by a British hacker named Marcus Hutchins, who discovered that the malware’s author had embedded a “kill switch” in the code. Hutchins was able to trip that switch, and the attack soon ended. In an unusual twist, Hutchins was arrested months later by the FBI during a visit to the U.S.; he pleaded not guilty and now awaits trial on charges he created unrelated forms of malware.

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