Ransomware victims are refusing to pay, tanking attackers’ profits
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Two new studies suggest that ransomware isn't the lucrative, enterprise-scale gotcha it used to be. Profits to attackers' wallets, and the percentage of victims paying, fell dramatically in 2022, according to two separate reports.
Not to mention all the people counting unmarked bills, and checking behind the third park bench
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Two new studies suggest that ransomware isn't the lucrative, enterprise-scale gotcha it used to be. Profits to attackers' wallets, and the percentage of victims paying, fell dramatically in 2022, according to two separate reports.
Not to mention all the people counting unmarked bills, and checking behind the third park bench
Damn, what bummer, if one can't ransom and pillage anymore like in the good old days! :O :laugh:
A new .NET Serializer All in one Menu-Ribbon Bar Taking over the world since 1371!
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Damn, what bummer, if one can't ransom and pillage anymore like in the good old days! :O :laugh:
A new .NET Serializer All in one Menu-Ribbon Bar Taking over the world since 1371!
-
Two new studies suggest that ransomware isn't the lucrative, enterprise-scale gotcha it used to be. Profits to attackers' wallets, and the percentage of victims paying, fell dramatically in 2022, according to two separate reports.
Not to mention all the people counting unmarked bills, and checking behind the third park bench
-
Two new studies suggest that ransomware isn't the lucrative, enterprise-scale gotcha it used to be. Profits to attackers' wallets, and the percentage of victims paying, fell dramatically in 2022, according to two separate reports.
Not to mention all the people counting unmarked bills, and checking behind the third park bench
IMHO, the best way to kill the ransomware "industry" would be to make paying the ransoms illegal.