Ransomware on Rise - FBI Releases Alert and Guidance


Key Takeaways:

Ransomware attacks, which employ a devious and malicious type of malware that encrypts or locks valuable digital files and then demand a ransom payment to release those files, are on the rise. Indeed, the May 2016 edition of the ABA Journal magazine reports that the number of detected ransomware variants has grown to nearly 3.8 million in 2015 (from 638,000 in 2014). Ransomware attacks hospitals, businesses, state and local governments, and other institutions where access to information is critical to the target’s operations. On April 29, 2016, the FBI’s Cyber division issued an alert and guidance

Ransomware generally enters the victim’s systems via (i) an established attack vector such as a user visiting a compromised website, (ii) the exploit of unpatched systems, or (iii) most commonly, via a social engineering or phishing attack which attempts to get an authorized employee to execute a malicious email or click a link to a compromised site. Once it is established, the malware begins encrypting files and folders on local drives, any attached drives, backup drives and in some instances any device connected to the same network. Victims are usually unaware of the infection until they can no longer access their data or until they begin to see ransom messages on their computer. The attackers then demand payment for the key code needed to unencrypt the locked files. While older variants of ransomware had flaws in their encryption implementations allowing some hope of recovering your data without the key, newer versions use very robust encryption for which cracking is currently infeasible.

The FBI does not recommend paying a ransom in response to a ransomware attack because, according to FBI Cyber Division Assistant Director James Trainor, (i) paying a ransom will not guarantee that an organization will get its data back, and (ii) the payment will only serve to encourage more cyber criminals to undertake additional ransomware attacks. This is hard advice for many organizations to take. Faced with the permanent loss of valuable data and a ransom demand that can sometimes be only hundreds of dollars, some organizations are tempted to pay the ransom and perpetuate the cycle. Accordingly, the FBI recommends that organizations focus on prevention, incident response, and remediation. 

While there can be no guarantee against becoming a ransomware victim, this alert recommends the following information governance and security practices to close off attack vectors and manage and recover from a ransomware attack:

Prevent:

Respond:

Recover:


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National Law Review, Volume VI, Number 133