Cointelegraph
William Suberg
Written by William Suberg,Staff Writer
Igor Belkin
Reviewed by Igor Belkin,Former Staff Editor

You Betcha Not Petya: New Cyberattack Neither Petya Nor Bitcoin Ransomware

The virus spreading through the world’s computers demanding Bitcoin this week is not actually ransomware, researchers say.

You Betcha Not Petya: New Cyberattack Neither Petya Nor Bitcoin Ransomware

The cyberattack infecting computers across the world on Tuesday was not ransomware and “not designed to make money,” research suggests.

After malicious software began locking user computers in Russia and Ukraine, then spreading throughout the world, experts initially believed it to be a reincarnation of the Petya ransomware.

However, as more details come to light, it appears the ransomware element - which like WannaCry last month asks users to pay $300 in Bitcoin to regain control - is, in fact, a front.

Analysts are now saying that this attack is a disk-wiping effort masquerading as a WannaCry-style ransomware to generate media hype.

“This is definitely not designed to make money. This is designed to spread fast and cause damage, with a plausibly deniable cover of ‘ransomware,’” a report by Medium researcher “the grugq” published on Wednesday determines.

A look at the Bitcoin wallet shown to victims appears to confirm this, the one address distributed in the attack having accumulated just under 4 BTC ($9,970) since Tuesday from 45 transactions.

Bitcoin Address

In the countries first affected, meanwhile, blame is once again turning political, with Ukraine suggesting state-sponsored Russian hackers were behind the attack.

Cointelegraph is committed to independent, transparent journalism. This news article is produced in accordance with Cointelegraph’s Editorial Policy and aims to provide accurate and timely information. Readers are encouraged to verify information independently. Read our Editorial Policy https://cointelegraph.com/editorial-policy