Chinese shopping platform Pandabuy told BleepingComputer it previously paid a a ransom demand to prevent stolen data from being leaked, only for the same threat actor to extort the company again this week.
says someone who’s business hasn’t ever depended on data which has been locked. the idiocy in these comments is astounding. you always pay the ransom, get your business back (which only exists because of your data), then, lock it down. always. pay. the. ransom.
has worked 100% percent of the time (probably a dozen times) I’ve shepherded future clients who have called me for assistance, because all their customer information, vendor data, and billing was locked, and they didn’t have backups. if you’re fucked, you chalk it up to a business expense whether or not you get your data back. you pay the ranson, and you pray. then when you get access to your data again, you lock it down. always. everytime.
Not ransomware but just ransom to data exfil by a vulnerable API. But paying is still a dumb idea.
says someone who’s business hasn’t ever depended on data which has been locked. the idiocy in these comments is astounding. you always pay the ransom, get your business back (which only exists because of your data), then, lock it down. always. pay. the. ransom.
"Hi, I just sent the ransom payment to the Bitcoin address you provided.
"Now you’ll unlock my data, right?
“… right?”
has worked 100% percent of the time (probably a dozen times) I’ve shepherded future clients who have called me for assistance, because all their customer information, vendor data, and billing was locked, and they didn’t have backups. if you’re fucked, you chalk it up to a business expense whether or not you get your data back. you pay the ranson, and you pray. then when you get access to your data again, you lock it down. always. everytime.
Sure. Make it profitable to the hackers to keep doing it.