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Hackers strike across Europe, sparking widespread disruption


A crane loads a shipping container branded AP Moller-Maersk A/S onto the freight ship. The company fell victim to a widespread cyberattack on June 27, 2017.

Balint Porneczi | Bloomberg | Getty Images

A crane loads a shipping container branded AP Moller-Maersk A/S onto the freight ship. The company fell victim to a widespread cyberattack on June 27, 2017.

Hackers have caused widespread disruption across Europe, hitting Ukraine especially hard.

Company and government officials reported serious intrusions at the Ukrainian power grid, banks and government offices. Russia’s Rosneft oil company also reported falling victim to hacking, as did Danish shipping giant A.P. Moller-Maersk.

Other Ukrainian companies reporting issues include the aircraft manufacturer Antonov and two postal services.

The BBC reported British advertising agency WPP is also among the dozens of firms reporting problems.

Across Europe, other companies seemingly affected include French construction materials company St. Gobain and offices in Spain of large multinationals such as food giant Mondelez and legal firm DLA Piper also suffered attacks, according to the BBC.

“We are talking about a cyberattack,” said Anders Rosendahl, a spokesman for the Copenhagen-based group. “It has affected all branches of our business, at home and abroad.”

Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister Pavlo Rozenko on Tuesday posted a picture of a darkened computer screen to Twitter, saying that the computer system at the government’s headquarters has been shut down.

There’s very little information about who might be behind the disruption, but technology experts who examined screenshots circulating on social media said it bears the hallmarks of ransomware, the name given to programs that hold data hostage by scrambling it until a payment is made.

Ukraine’s prime minister, Volodymyr Groysman, called the cyberattack “unprecedented” but that “vital systems haven’t been affected.”

The world is still recovering from a previous outbreak of ransomware, called WannaCry or WannaCrypt, which spread rapidly using digital break-in tools originally created by the U.S. National Security Agency and recently leaked to the web.

–CNBC.com’s David Gernon contributed to this report.

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