Philippine Daily Inquirer

ALARM RAISED OVER STRAIN OF ‘DEARCRY’ RANSOMWARE

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WASHINGTON—A new strain of ransomware has emerged which exploits a security flaw in Microsoft Exchange servers, signaling potentiall­y damaging consequenc­es from a high-profile hack.

Microsoft and other security researcher­s said the new ransomware dubbed “DearCry” was showing up in servers affected by the breach attributed to a Chinese hacker group.

“We have detected and are now blocking a new family of ransomware being used after an initial compromise of unpatched on-premises Exchange Servers,” said a tweet from Microsoft Security Intelligen­ce.

Other researcher­s including Michael Gillespie, founder of the ID Ransomware service, noted the new strain of malware on Thursday, which could lead to a new wave of ransomware attacks that encrypt computer systems and seek to extract payments from operators.

Door for hackers

This is the latest sign that the security flaw which became public this month could open the door to a variety of hackers, cybercrimi­nals and cyberespio­nage operators.

“While patching to prevent compromise­s will be easy, remediatin­g any systems that have already been compromise­d will not,” said Brent Callow of the security firm Emsisoft.

“At this point, it’s absolutely critical that government­s quickly come up with a strategy to help organizati­ons secure their Exchange servers and remediate any compromise­s before an already bad situation becomes even worse.”

Earlier this week the FBI and Department of Homeland Security warned that the Exchange server vulnerabil­ity may be exploited for nefarious purposes.

Devastatin­g attacks

A joint statement by the agencies said that “adversarie­s could exploit these vulnerabil­ities to compromise networks, steal informatio­n, encrypt data for ransom, or even execute a destructiv­e attack.”

The DHS Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency has been pressing for patches to be applied to networks in both government and the private sector.

The potentiall­y devastatin­g hack, believed to have affected at least 30,000 Microsoft email servers, comes just months after revelation­s that Russia was probably behind the massive SolarWinds hack that shook the government and corporate security last year.

The two incidents add to pressure on the Biden administra­tion as it weighs options for “hacking back” or other moves to protect cyberspace.

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