The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Global cyberattac­k may have aimed for havoc, not extortion

- By Raphael Satter and Jan M. Olsen

PARIS » The cyberattac­k that has locked up computers around the world while demanding a ransom may not be an extortion attempt after all, but an effort to create havoc in Ukraine, security experts say.

“There may be a more nefarious motive behind the attack,” Gavin O’Gorman, an investigat­or with U.S. antivirus firm Symantec, said in a blog post . “Perhaps this attack was never intended to make money, rather to simply disrupt a large number of Ukrainian organizati­ons.”

The rogue program landed its heaviest blows on the Eastern European nation, where the government, dozens of banks and other institutio­ns were sent reeling. It disabled computers at government agencies, energy companies, cash machines, supermarke­ts, railways and communicat­ions providers. Many of these organizati­ons had recovered by Thursday.

The program, known by a variety of names, including Not Petya, initially appeared to be ransomware, a type of malicious software that encrypts its victims’ data and holds it hostage until a payment is made, usually in bitcoins, the hard-to-trace digital currency often used by criminals.

But O’Gorman and several other researcher­s said the culprits would have been hard-pressed to make money off the scheme. They appear to have relied on a single email address that was blocked almost immediatel­y and a single bitcoin account that has collected the relatively puny sum of $10,000.

Others, such as Russian anti-virus firm Kaspersky Lab, said clues in the code suggest the program’s authors would have been incapable of decrypting the data, further indicating the ransom demands may have been a smoke screen.

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