Cyber attack hits BNP Paribas arm
A global cyberattack has hit the property arm of France’s biggest bank BNP Paribas, one of the largest financial institutions known to be affected by an extortion campaign that started in Russia and Ukraine before spreading.
The worldwide attack has disrupted computers at Russia’s biggest oil company, Ukrainian banks and multinational firms with a virus similar to the ransomware that infected more than 300,000 computers last month.
Reverberations from the attack continued on Wednesday with shipping giant A.P. Moller-Maersk, which handles one in seven containers shipped worldwide, telling Reuters it is unable to process new orders after being hit by the cyber attack.
Among other French companies, retailer Auchan said Tuesday’s cyber attack had hit terminal payments in its stores in Ukraine but the incident was now over.
French construction and building materials group banksSt Gobain said its systems were gradually returning to normal after the company fell victim to the cyber attack on Tuesday.
The attack hit BNP’s Real Estate subsidiary, a BNP spokesman told Reuters, after a person familiar with the matter had said that some staff computers were blocked on Tuesday due to the incident.
“The necessary measures have been taken to rapidly contain the attack,” he said.
BNP Paribas Real Estate provides advisory, property and investment management and development services mostly in Europe.
It employed 3,472 staff at end of last year, with operations in 16 countries, and had 24 billion euros ($27.26 billion) in assets under management.
Many of the companies affected globally by the cyber attack had links to Ukraine although there is no indication that this was the case for BNP. It owns a bank in the country, UkrSibbank.
The ransomware virus includes code known as “Eternal Blue”, which cyber security experts widely believe was stolen from the U.S. National Security Agency. If one computer in a network is infected, the virus can spread rapidly.
The virus crippled computers running Microsoft Corp’s Windows by encrypting hard drives and overwriting files, then demanded $300 in bitcoin payments to restore access.
Earlier this year following a similar attack, many banks in Europe said they had stepped up efforts to shield themselves.
BNP Paribas set up a dedicated department in 2015 called Information Security and Information Systems and launched a “transformation programme” to upgrade its security systems.
Authorities including the European Central Bank have also checked their technology systems in recent years.
Among BNP’s peers, France’s Societe Generale told Reuters on Tuesday it was not affected by the attack. Credit Agricole and BPCE both declined to comment.
Banks generally have more robust cyber defences than other sectors, because of the sensitive nature of their industry. But ageing technology and banks’ attractiveness to hackers means they are often targets.