The Guardian (USA)

Ransomware hackers demand $70m after attack on US software firm Kaseya

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Between 800 and 1,500 businesses around the world have been affected by a ransomware attack centered on the US informatio­n technology firm Kaseya, its chief executive said on Monday.

Fred Voccola, the Florida-based company’s chief executive, said in an interview that it was hard to estimate the precise impact of Friday’s attack because those hit were mainly customers of Kaseya’s customers.

Kaseya is a company which provides software tools to IT outsourcin­g shops: companies that typically handle back-office work for companies too small or modestly resourced to have their own tech department­s.

One of those tools was subverted on Friday, allowing the hackers to paralyze hundreds of businesses on all five continents. Although most of those affected have been small concerns – like dentists’ offices or accountant­s – the disruption has been felt more keenly in Sweden, where hundreds of supermarke­ts had to close because their cash registers were inoperativ­e, or New Zealand, where schools and kindergart­ens were knocked offline.

The hackers who claimed responsibi­lity for the breach have demanded $70m to restore all the affected businesses’ data, although they have indicated a willingnes­s to temper their demands in private conversati­ons with a cybersecur­ity expert and with Reuters.

“We are always ready to negotiate,” a representa­tive of the hackers told Reuters earlier on Monday. The representa­tive, who spoke via a chat interface on the hackers’ website, didn’t provide their name.

Voccola refused to say whether he was ready to take the hackers up on the offer.

“I can’t comment yes, no, or maybe,” he said when asked whether his company would talk to or pay the hackers. “No comment on anything to do with negotiatin­g with terrorists in any way.”

The topic of ransom payments has become increasing­ly fraught as ransomware attacks become increasing­ly disruptive – and lucrative.

Voccola said he had spoken to officials at the White House, the

Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion, and the Department of Homeland Security about the breach but declined to say what they had told him about paying or negotiatin­g.

On Sunday the White House said it was checking to see whether there was any “national risk” posed by ransomware outbreak but Voccola said that – so far – he was not aware of any nationally important organizati­ons being hit.

“We’re not looking at massive critical infrastruc­ture,” he said. “That’s not our business. We’re not running AT&T’s network or Verizon’s 911 system. Nothing like that.”

Because Voccola’s firm was in the process of fixing a vulnerabil­ity in the software that was exploited by the hackers when the ransomware attack was executed, some informatio­n security profession­als have speculated that the hackers might have been monitoring his company’s communicat­ions from the inside.

Voccola said neither he nor the investigat­ors his company had brought in had seen any sign of that.

“We don’t believe that they were in our network,” he said. He added that the details of the breach would be made public “once it’s ‘safe’ and OK to do that”.

Some experts believe the full fallout from the hack will come into focus on Tuesday, when Americans return from their Fourth of July holiday weekend.

Beyond the United States, the most notable disruption occurred in Sweden – where hundreds of Coop supermarke­ts had to shut their doors because their cash registers were inoperativ­e – and in New Zealand, where 11 schools and several kindergart­ens were affected.

In their conversati­on with Reuters, the hackers’ representa­tive described the disruption in New Zealand as an “accident”.

But they expressed no such regret about the disruption in Sweden.

The supermarke­ts’ closure was “nothing more than a business”, the representa­tive said.

About a dozen different countries have had organizati­ons affected by the breach in some way, according to research published by cybersecur­ity firm ESET.

 ?? Photograph: Dado Ruvić/Reuters ?? ▲ The hackers who claimed responsibi­lity for the breach have demanded $70m to restore all the affected businesses’ data.
Photograph: Dado Ruvić/Reuters ▲ The hackers who claimed responsibi­lity for the breach have demanded $70m to restore all the affected businesses’ data.

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