Kaspersky: New virus hit 2,000 users mainly in Russia, Ukraine
MOSCOW, Jun 28 (PRIME) -- The number of users attacked by the new ransomware virus, named by Kaspersky Lab as ExPetr, has reached 2,000 with the bulk of victims located in Russia and Ukraine, the antivirus program maker said on Wednesday in a statement.
“Cases were also registered in Poland, Italy, the U.K., Germany, France, the U.S., and other countries,” Kaspersky Lab said.
The company said the malware exploited several vectors of attack. “It was discovered that a modified exploit EternalBlue and the exploit EternalRomance were used to expand in corporate networks,” they said.
The virus demanded U.S.$300 in bitcoins and Kaspersky said that creators of the malware received about $2,700.
The encoder does not belong to the already known ransomware group Petya, although they share some code lines. “In this case, we’re speaking about a new family of malware with the functions significantly different from those of Petya’s,” Kaspersky Lab said.
A global ransomware attack hit IT systems of companies in several countries of the world on Tuesday. The assault targeted oil, power, telecom, and pharmaceutical firms.
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