Petya Ransomware Spreading Rapidly Worldwide, Just Like WannaCry

in #warning8 years ago


Watch out, readers! It is ransomware, another WannaCry, another wide-spread attack.

The WannaCry ransomware is not dead yet and another large scale ransomware attack is making chaos worldwide, shutting down computers at corporates, power supplies, and banks across Russia, Ukraine, Spain, France, UK, India, and Europe and demanding $300 in bitcoins.

According to multiple sources, a new variant of Petya ransomware, also known as Petwrap, is spreading rapidly with the help of same Windows SMBv1 vulnerability that the WannaCry ransomware abused to infect 300,000 systems and servers worldwide in just 72 hours last month.

Apart from this, many victims have also informed that Petya ransomware has also infected their patch systems.

"Petya uses the NSA Eternalblue exploit but also spreads in internal networks with WMIC and PSEXEC. That's why patched systems can get hit." Mikko Hypponen confirms, Chief Research Officer at F-Secure.

Petya is a nasty piece of ransomware and works very differently from any other ransomware malware. Unlike other traditional ransomware, Petya does not encrypt files on a targeted system one by one.

Instead, Petya reboots victims computers and encrypts the hard drive's master file table (MFT) and renders the master boot record (MBR) inoperable, restricting access to the full system by seizing information about file names, sizes, and location on the physical disk.

Petya ransomware replaces the computer's MBR with its own malicious code that displays the ransom note and leaves computers unable to boot.

Don't Pay Ransom, You Wouldn’t Get Your Files Back
Infected users are advised not to pay the ransom because hackers behind Petya ransomware can’t get your emails anymore.

Posteo, the German email provider, has suspended the email address i.e. [email protected], which was behind used by the criminals to communicate with victims after getting the ransom to send the decryption keys.

At the time of writing, 23 victims have paid in Bitcoin to '1Mz7153HMuxXTuR2R1t78mGSdzaAtNbBWX' address for decrypting their files infected by Petya, which total roughly $6775.

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