Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

US blames NKorea for Wanna Cry attack

CYBER WARFARE Hacking entity known as Lazarus Group carried out the attack

- Yashwant Raj yashwant.raj@hindustant­imes.com

WASHINGTON: The US has officially accused North Korea of unleashing ransom ware Wanna Cry that crippled computer systems in hospitals, schools, government offices, businesses and homes around the world past May. India was among the worst hit.

“After careful investigat­ion, the United States is publicly attributin­g the massive WannaCry cyberattac­k to North Korea. We do not make this allegation lightly. We do so with evidence, and we do so with partners.,” Thomas P Bossert, an adviser to President Donald Trump on homeland security and counterter­rorism, told reporter son Tuesday.

“Other government­s and private companies agree. The United Kingdom, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and Japan have seen our analysis, and they join us in denouncing North Korea for Wanna Cry ,” he added.

“Commercial partners have also acted. Microsoft traced the attack to cyber affiliates of the North Korean government, and others in the security community have contribute­d their analysis .”

He did not spell out the consequenc­es, if any, that could follow these findings, but in an op-ed in The Wall Street Journal, B os se rt issued a thinly veiled threat of consequenc­es. “When we must, the US will act alone to impose costs and consequenc­es for cy ber malfeasanc­e ,” he wrote on Monday. He went onto list actions the US has taken against countries, entities and individual­s it found involved in hacking.

North Korea’ s involvemen­t in the attack had been suspected for some weeks now. Microsoft, an older version of whose operating software was the main target of the attack, had said so in October.

Wanna Cry was a ransom ware that hit computer systems in 150 countries, locking data and digital documents and freezing up screens with pop-ups demanding payment of money for unfreezing and resume normal operations.

The British health system was shut down, and entities were impacted in Spain, Russia and Germany.

Kasper sky Labs, a Moscowbase­d maker of anti-virus protection, had then said India was among the third worst hit by ran--

somware; one estimate put the damage at 48,000 systems — not computers, but computer systems with each containing many individual units.

The malware attacked computer using an older version of the Windows software. The worm itself was not a North Korean invention, but a cyberweapo­n developed by America’ s National Security Agency that was stolen and released by a group of hackers called Shadow Brokers.

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