Cyber Criminals Hone Attacks Against Schools


The FBI recently issued a Flash alert warning higher education institutions, k-12 schools, and seminaries about increasing numbers of ransomware attacks affecting the education industry.  According to the warning, “[s]ince March 2020, the FBI has become aware of PYSA ransomware attacks against U.S. and foreign government entities, educational institutions, private companies, and the healthcare sector by unidentified cyber actors.”

The ransomware attacks are initiated by gaining unauthorized access to networks either by exploiting Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) credentials or phishing.  Then the PYSA ransomware extracts sensitive information and encrypts files with the .pysa extension.  In some circumstances, the attackers sell the extracted information on the dark web.  The FBI reports that some criminals will also remove the malicious files after deployment, thus making it even more difficult for the victims to discover what has happened.

The FBI does not recommend paying any ransom as it emboldens and encourages more criminal conduct.  Acknowledging that many educational institutions might choose to pay after determining few other options exist, the FBI points out that there is no guarantee that paying any ransom will result in the return of the data.

The FBI also suggests schools implement mitigation steps as follows:


Copyright © 2025 Robinson & Cole LLP. All rights reserved.
National Law Review, Volume XI, Number 96