by a major ransomware attackAttack.Ransomthis week , as new figures showed the country is the most frequently targeted by the malware in Europe . The attackAttack.Ransomappears to have struck Northern Ireland ’ s Ulster University on the same day a ransomware outageAttack.Ransomaffected University College London ( UCL ) . Ulster Uni ’ s Information Services Division ( ISD ) revealed yesterday that its AV partner suspects a zero-day threat was the cause , also echoing the current thinking at UCL . Three departmental file shares have been affected and remained at “ read only ” access at the time of writing . Like its counterparts at UCL , Ulster University ’ s ISD appears to be following best practice regarding back-ups , which will help mitigate the impact of the attack . It explained : “ ISD take backups of all our shared drives and this should protect most data even if it has been encrypted by the malware . Once we are confident the infections have been contained , then we will restore the most recent back up of the file . ISD can confirm that a backup of the shares was successfully taken at close of business on Tuesday 12th June. ” Fraser Kyne , EMEA CTO at Bromium , urged all UK university IT teams to be on high alert for possible attacks . “ The initial reports are suggesting that the ransomware was able to get in at UCL through a zero-day exploit , which allowed it to bypass antivirus software , ” he added . “ That really underscores the limitations of antivirus ; in that it is only able to stop things that it knows are bad . Given that most malware is only seen once in the wild before it evolves into something different , there ’ s very little that antivirus can offer in the way of protection. ” UCL now believes the initial infection vector was a user visiting a compromised website rather than opening a phishing email attachment as first thought . The latest stats from Malwarebytes show the UK is the hardest hit in Europe when it comes to ransomware . There were three-times as many detections in the UK in Q1 2017 than the next most impacted country : France . In fact , while ransomware infections dropped 4 % across Europe they increased 57 % in the UK year-on-year . The total volume of cyber-attacks on UK firms soared 500 % year-on-year , with no single threat type declining . Across Europe , Italy and the UK were almost tied as having the highest number of malware detections in Europe ; 16.3 % and 16.2 % respectively .
Media Prima Berhad 's computer systems have been locked out by cyber attackers who are demandingAttack.Ransommillions of ringgit in ransomAttack.Ransom. The media company , which runs a stable of TV and radio channels , newspapers , advertising and digital media companies was hit by a ransomware attackAttack.Ransomlast Thursday ( Nov 8 ) , The Edge Financial Daily reported . Ransomware is a type of malicious software ( malware ) designed to block access to a computer system until a sum of money is paidAttack.Ransom. The report , quoting a source , said the attackers are demandingAttack.Ransom1,000 bitcoins to release access to the computer systems . This means that the attackers are demanding a ransomAttack.Ransomof RM26.42 million ( S $ 8.71 million ) . Media Prima is listed on Bursa Malaysia 's main board . It operates , among others , three national newspapers , namely New Straits Times , Berita Harian and Harian Metro ; free-to-air television stations , namely TV3 , TV9 , ntv7 and 8TV ; and four radio stations , namely Fly FM , Hot FM , One FM and Kool FM . When contacted , Media Prima group managing director , Datuk Kamal Khalid , declined to comment when asked to confirm whether the company has been hitAttack.Ransomby ransomware . He urged The Star to get in touch with the company 's corporate communications department for comments , and efforts are ongoing to contact the department . The Edge Financial Daily report said it was not immediately known whether Media Prima 's data has been breachedAttack.Databreach, and whether the media group would be suffering financial losses due to the ransomware attackAttack.Ransom. It quoted another source saying that Media Prima 's office e-mail has been affected but that the company has migrated the email to another system . The source reportedly added that Media Prima has decided not to pay the ransomAttack.Ransom.