Number of cyberattack victims in Europe not rising as feared: Europol A spokesperson from Europol said the attack appears to have been stabilized.

 -- A massive global cyberattack that so far has struck more than 200,000 companies, hospitals, government agencies and other organizations in 150 countries appears to have been slowed down in Europe, according to Europol, the European Union police agency.

"It does not look like the numbers are rising as we expected," Europol spokesperson Claire Georges told ABC News, referring to the number of victims struck by what Europol has called an "unprecedented" attack.

Users appear to have upped their security in the wake of the May 12 attack, Georges said. Experts had feared the "WannaCry" virus would unleash another round of chaos on Monday as a new workweek begins.

"It might be sitting on many computers in sectors, in companies over the weekend and when they're switched on again Monday morning we might see the infection rates going back up," Europol Director Rob Wainwright said.

But fears of another immediate wave of infections in Europe didn't appear to have become reality.

The attackers are believed to have used tools developed by the National Security Agency that were leaked to the public by the hacker group The Shadow Brokers in April to exploit a vulnerability in Microsoft Windows, the world’s most popular operating system.

Thousands of users on Friday received the message "Oops, your important files are encrypted" along with threats from the hackers who encrypt computer files so they can't be accessed and threaten to delete them unless a ransom of up to $300 or more in Bitcoins is paid.

The perpetrators remain a mystery.

"All of the police forces in Europe are working together to find out the identity of the hackers," Georges, the Europol spokesperson, said. "We've seen a very big response from key public and private parties. It has been a good success in terms of international cooperation."

Detectives at Europol are racing to crack the encryption holding users' files hostage while also trying to trace the Bitcoins that the hackers have demanded and track down any leads that can be linked back to the culprits. The United States is participating in the Europol investigation and has representatives working at the agency's European Cybercrime Centre in the Netherlands.

"We are very busy at the moment," Georges said.

ABC News' Brian Ross, Rhonda Schwartz, James Gordon Meek, Dean Schabner and Maia Davis contributed to this report.