Rapid digitisation in all sectors in India has made the country critically prone to targeted cyber attacks and ‘WannaCry’ ransomware attack is “just the tip of the iceberg”, a cyber intelligence security company warned on Wednesday.
The firm also said ‘WannaCry’ ransomware, that exploited MS17-010 vulnerability in a Microsoft Windows operating system and hit nearly 200,000 systems in 150 countries, is the first wave of several upcoming cyber intrusions as digitisation spreads its footprint across the globe.
The group noted that “one size fits all approach” can never be the solution to curb the increasing cyber attacks and a constant vigil is the only solution to stay ahead in the race with the intruders.
Soon after ‘WannaCry’ affected several systems, the same Windows vulnerability was again exploited to spread another type of malware that was quietly generating digital cash from machines it infected.
Tens of thousands of computers globally were affected by the “Adylkuzz attack” that targets machines, let them operate and only slows those down to generate digital cash or “Monero” cryptocurrency in the background.
It is an alternative to Bitcoin and is being used for trading in drugs, stolen credit cards and counterfeit goods.
A few days later, Croatian security researchers identified a new strain of malware “EternalRocks” that was more dangerous than WannaCry and was potentially tougher to fight.
According to the researchers, “EternalRocks” exploited the same vulnerability in Windows that helped ‘WannaCry’ spread to computers. It also used a NSA tool known as ‘EternalBlue’ for proliferation.
By Baishakhi Dutta