Standup9ja: ‘Nigeria Likely Target of Worldwide Cyber
Attack’
Nigeria is likely going to be hit by a massive cyber-attack
in the coming weeks, according to a top government official.
This is coming in the wake of one of the largest
cyber-attacks in history, which has affected over 100, 000 computers in 99
countries including Russia and China.
The official, who pleaded anonymity because he was not
cleared to speak to the media on the issue, told Standup9ja on Sunday yesterday
why Nigeria is a possible target.
“Nigeria has been flagged among the countries to be
attacked. Our massive usage of Microsoft Operating System has already made us
vulnerable. We may see the true picture next week when work resumes,” the
official who is a cybercrime prevention expert told our reporter on phone.
He said it was most likely the attack had already hit the
country because it was only reported globally yesterday (Friday).
But the National Information Development Agency (NITDA) said
yesterday it had yet to receive any report of an attack on any of establishment
in the country.
NITDA’s Director General, Dr Isa Ali Ibrahim Pantami said
though no attack has been reported anywhere in the country, the agency had put
measures in place to prevent it from spreading to Nigeria.
He said Nigerians should quickly report any abnormality
noticed in their computer system to: help@cerrt.ng, support@cerrt.ng,
incident@cerrt.ng.
He said the ransomware attack was exploiting vulnerabilities
in the Microsoft Windows Operating System, especially those not currently
supported such as Windows XP, Windows 8, Windows Server 2003.
“Microsoft released a patch for the vulnerability in March
and machines that were updated with the patch would have been automatically
protected,” Dr Pantami said.
Furthermore, the NITDA DG said should any system be infected
by the ransomware, it should be isolated from other networks to prevent the
threat from further spreading.
In addition, he said, the following action could be taken
immediately: remove the system from network, do not use flash/pen
drive/external drives on the system to copy files to other systems, format the
system completely, and contact NITDA’s Computer Emergency Readiness and
Response Team for assistance.
Media reports say the massive cyber-attack, which is using
tools believed to have been stolen from the US National Security Agency (NSA),
came to limelight Friday when many organisations noticed disruption in their
online activities.
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