The Ukrainian central bank said on Friday
it had warned state-owned and private lenders of the appearance of new
malware as security services said Ukraine faced cyber attacks like those that knocked out global systems in June.
Representational Image: Reuters
The 27 June attack, dubbed NotPetya, took
down many Ukrainian government agencies and businesses, before spreading
rapidly through corporate networks of multinationals with operations or
suppliers in eastern Europe.
Kiev's central bank has since been working
with the government-backed Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT) and
police to boost the defences of the Ukrainian banking sector by quickly
sharing information.
"Therefore on 11 August ..., the central
bank promptly informed banks about the appearance of new malicious code,
its features, compromise indicators and the need to implement
precautionary measures to prevent infection," the central bank told Reuters in emailed comments.
According to its letter to banks, seen by Reuters, the new malware is spread by opening email attachments of word documents.
"The nature of this malicious code, its
mass distribution, and the fact that at the time of its distribution it
was not detected by any anti-virus software, suggest that this attack is
preparation for a mass cyber-attack on the corporate networks of
Ukrainian businesses," the letter said.
Ukraine - regarded by some, despite
Kremlin denials, as a guinea pig for Russian state-sponsored hacks - is
fighting an uphill battle in turning pockets of protection into a
national strategy to keep state institutions and systemic companies
safe.
The state cyber police
and Security and Defence Council have said Ukraine could be targeted on
24 August with a NotPetya-style attack aimed at destabilising the
country as it celebrates its 1991 independence from the Soviet Union.
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