Welcome to the FUTURE: Maine cops pay Bitcoin ransom to end office hostage drama
Don't run bad stuff from the internet
13 Apr 2015 - Iain Thomson
Don't run bad stuff from the internet
13 Apr 2015 - Iain Thomson
Blundering cops in Maine, US, have enriched malware masterminds by paying up to decrypt files held hostage by ransomware.
Four city police departments and a sheriff's
office in Lincoln County share a common computer network run by Burgess
Computer, which hosts the plods' administrative files.
Then one day the entire system was encrypted by
the Megacode ransomware, which scrambles documents and demands Bitcoins
to decrypt them.
This sort of malware typically scans computers and networks
for documents, generates a random encryption key per file, uses those
to encrypt the data, and then encrypts the keys using a public-private
key pair. Only the crims have the private key needed to unscramble the documents, and it costs
money to obtain that, effectively holding the information to ransom.
Victims have a few days to pay up before the private key is deleted
forever.
After trying to restore the encrypted files for a
couple of days, the police in Maine decided to pay the $300 ransom in
Bitcoins.
~~~~~ CONTINUE AT: ~~~~~
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2015/04/13/us_police_ransomware/
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