Off the wire
Morocco, Nigeria sign deal to build gas pipeline across West Africa  • Libya, Italy join hands to stem flow of illegal immigrants  • U.S. dollar declines on downbeat data  • Study: small DNA marker set helpful, but raises privacy concerns  • Federer to skip Roland Garros, focus on grass and hard court seasons  • Rwanda's economy to recover on expanded domestic production: IMF  • Venezuela protest victims reach 40 after one more police dead  • 2nd LD Writethru: U.S. charter bus carrying 26 kids overturns near Baltimore, many injured  • Italian police take over Lidl supermarket offices in mafia probe  • UN agencies call for urgent funding to help South Sudanese refugees  
You are here:   Home

Less than 70,000 dollars paid in "ransomware" cyberattack: White House

Xinhua, May 15, 2017 Adjust font size:

Less than 70,000 U.S. dollars has been paid in a "ransomware" cyberattack that has affected about 150 countries worldwide, the White House said Monday.

"We are not aware of payments that have led to any data recovery," White House Homeland Security adviser Tom Bossert said at a daily briefing.

Bossert said the ransomware attack, known as WannaCry or WannaCript, has infected more than 300,000 machines in about 150 countries but the good news is "the infection rates have slowed over the weekend."

Specially, no U.S. federal systems are affected, he said.

Bossert said the ransomware has three variants but patching systems can help protest against all these variants.

On Sunday, Microsoft slammed the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) because vulnerabilities used for the attack was first discovered by the spy agency, but it chose to keep them secret until they were stolen and leaked.

"This was a vulnerability exploit as one part of a much larger tool that was put together by the culpable parties and not by the U.S. government," Bossert argued. "This was not a tool developed by the NSA to hold ransom data." Enditem