Technology news and Jobs arrow Information Technology News arrow Ransomware emerging as threat to online home users
Ransomware emerging as threat to online home users E-mail
by Stan Beer   
Tuesday, 30 May 2006
The internet world has recently been encountering more and more malware attacks attempting to balckmail home users for profit, according to an internet security specialist.

Accordng to internet security firm, Trend Micro, a new type of malware threat called ‘ransomware’ is a continuation of ‘phishing,’ and is slowly becoming a greater threat to home computers.

Ransomware trap home users into schemes originally meant for large corporations. This change of targets has gradually altered the threat landscape; these internet extorters have realised that although targeting ‘big fish’ can result in large profit, targeting home users or small businesses presents a much smaller risk of being caught.

The term ‘ransomware’ first appeared in May 2005 with the discovery of TROJ_PGPCODER.A, a Trojan that used malware encryption to blackmail users directly for money. The malware quietly sneaks onto systems and automatically initiates blackmailing by encrypting certain files; unless the decoder is obtained and used, the files can no longer be read. The malware also leaves a text file explaining how to decode the files.

This malware was followed by three variants in October, TROJ_CRYZIP.A in March of this year, and the two newest member of the ransomware family,  TROJ_RANSOM.A, which causes a message to pop up on infected systems saying that the computer is locked and may only be unlocked when the affected user pays the Trojan's author, and TROJ_ARHIVEUS.A which blackmailed the user into accessing and purchasing products from several pharmaceutical Web sites in order to get the password to unlock the encrypted files.

Before the appearance of ransomware, online blackmail targeted large companies, mostly by BOT worms.

Many companies have received internet blackmail threats over the last several years. These companies sometimes cooperate with the authorities to track down these criminals, which are sometimes successful. For example, a criminal group captured in Russia in 2004 apparently blackmailed several sports gambling companies for hundreds of thousands of US dollars, but in March of 2004, the four were arrested after attempting to blackmail a large broadband company in Japan.

Some companies completely ignore these threats, leading to distributed denial of service attacks on their websites, which create a shocking number of hits that paralyse the site. Other companies agree to pay these ransoms, unwilling to publicise the issue in order to protect the company. {moscomment}
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