US blames North Korea for WannaCry ransomware attacks which affected more than 300,000 computers across the world

US blames North Korea for WannaCry ransomware attacks which affected more than 300,000 computers across the world
HIGHLIGHTS

The US apparently has evidence for the claim, and the UK and Microsoft reached similar conclusions in their analyses of the attack, which plagued computers the world over in May

White House Homeland Security Adviser Tom Bossert has said that the US believes North Korea was behind the massive WannaCry cyberattack in May.

"After careful investigation, the US today publicly attributes the massive 'WannaCry' cyberattack to North Korea," Bossert wrote in a Wall Street Journal op-ed on Monday.

"The attack was widespread and cost billions, and North Korea is directly responsible."

The US has evidence for the claim, and the UK and Microsoft reached similar conclusions in their analyses of the attack, which plagued computers the world over in May, CNN quoted Bossert as saying.

The administration is calling on the private sector to do more to prevent such incidents, the adviser said, adding that Microsoft and others had taken action last week to disrupt North Korean hacking efforts.

CNN reported in June that UK intelligence believed a group associated with the North Korean government was behind the attack, and The Washington Post reported around the same time that the National Security Agency had reached a similar conclusion.

Bossert wrote that North Korea's "malicious behaviour" has gone on for years and is growing more egregious.

"WannaCry was indiscriminately reckless."

Pointing to threats outside of North Korea, Bossert said preventing similarly massive cyber incidents would take concentrated effort and that President Donald Trump had taken steps in the right direction, such as ordering the modernisation of government information technology to enhance the security of US computer systems and the sharing of software vulnerabilities with developers.

Bossert warned of the threat from Russian hackers and touted legal action taken against suspected hackers as well as the Trump administration's decision to ban software from the Russia-based company Kaspersky Lab in government computers.

The adviser pointed to the US government's recent charges against Chinese nationals for hacking and for identity and trade secret theft, as well as against Iranians for hacking, and he urged calling out "bad behaviour" by other countries, including what he called the "corrupt regime" of Tehran.

The global "WannaCry" cyberattack targeted computers running the Microsoft Windows operating system by encrypting data and demanding ransom payments in the Bitcoin cryptocurrency.

The attack took place on May 12 and infected over 230,000 computers in more than 150 countries.

IANS

IANS

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