As the world struggles to identify cybercriminals behind the global ransowmware attack that hit 150 countries, an Indian-origin security researcher working with Google has claimed that the hackers may have links to North Korea.
According to Neel Mehta’s discovery, the Lazarus Group, which works on behalf of North Koreans, may be behind the attack as the hacking group has, in the past, used the same coding and tools as were used in WannaCrypt — the software used in the current hacking into the Microsoft operating software, the BBC reported on Tuesday.
“Neel Mehta’s discovery is the most significant clue to date regarding the origins of WannaCrypt,” the report quoted Moscow-based cyber security firm Kaspersky Lab as saying.
Lazarus Group, which according to Mehta is based in China, was responsible for a major hack on Sony Pictures in 2014 and another on a Bangladeshi bank in 2016.
Kaspersky Lab, however, noted that a lot more information was needed about earlier versions of WannaCrypt before any firm conclusion could be reached.
“We believe it’s important that other researchers around the world investigate these similarities and attempt to discover more facts about the origin of WannaCrypt,” the cybersecurity company added.
Though North Korea has never admitted any involvement in the Sony Pictures hack, security researchers and the US government are confident of the theory and neither can rule out the possibility of a false flag.
There are possibilities that skilled hackers might have simply made the hack look like it had origins in North Korea by using similar techniques.
Kaspersky noted that false flags within WannaCrypt were “possible” but “improbable”, as the shared code was removed from later versions.
There is also the possibility that Lazarus Group may be working independently and without the instructions from North Korea, the report added.
Meanwhile, the White House said on Monday that less than $70,000 has been paid in the ransomware attack globally.
“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.
No US federal systems are affected, he said.
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