Ransomware is one of the most dangerous threats businesses and consumers face today. Whether you are an individual or a Fortune 500 company, the experience of getting locked out of your system, having your files encrypted, and being subjected to threats and demands for payment can be harrowing.
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While law enforcement and cybersecurity firms are fighting the rise of ransomware groups, this extremely lucrative and illegal business is flourishing. New ransomware gangs are appearing in the field every day, while more established ones rebrand and regroup to confuse efforts to track down and prosecute the perpetrators.
Here is everything you need to know about ransomware, how it works, and what you can do to mitigate the risk of attack.
Ransomware is one of the biggest cybersecurity problems on the internet and one of the biggest forms of cybercrime that organizations face today. Ransomware is a form of malicious software – malware – that encrypts files and documents on anything from a single PC all the way up to an entire network, including servers.
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Once files are encrypted by the ransomware, victims are left with few choices: They can regain access to their encrypted network by paying a ransom to the criminals behind the attack. They can restore data from their backups. They can hope there is a decryption key freely available. Or, they start again from scratch.
Some ransomware infections start with someone inside an organization clicking on what looks like an innocent attachment that, when opened, downloads the malicious payload and encrypts the network.
Other, much larger ransomware campaigns use software exploits and flaws, cracked passwords, and other vulnerabilities to gain access to organizations using weak points such as internet-facing servers or remote desktop logins. The attackers will hunt secretly through the network until they control as much as possible – before encrypting all they can.
It can be a headache for companies of all sizes if vital files and documents, networks, or servers are suddenly encrypted and inaccessible. Even worse, after you are attacked with file-encrypting ransomware, criminals will announce brazenly that they’re holding your corporate data hostage until you pay a ransom in order to get the data back. Some will even publish stolen data on the internet for all to see.
Known as AIDS or the PC Cyborg Trojan, the virus was sent to victims on a floppy disc. The ransomware counted the number of times the PC was booted: once it hit 90, it encrypted the machine and the files on it and demanded the user ‘renew their license’ with ‘PC Cyborg Corporation ‘ by sending $189 or $378 to a post office box in Panama.