Odd that you can see exactly in that tweet where his staffer stopped writing and handed the phone over to Donnie.
Odd that you can see exactly in that tweet where his staffer stopped writing and handed the phone over to Donnie.
Locking a company out of their systems isn’t the most lucrative part of ransomware anymore. Data exfiltration and threatening to release the data to the highest bidder is now the norm.
Ransomware also typically sits on a system doing nothing for ~6 weeks before ever starting to encrypt and upload data. Even if companies have backups to restore from, they need to choose whether they’re going to restore entire machines quickly and risk still having the ransomware on the restored machine. Or they can take the long a painful route of spinning up new machines, then restoring just the data itself to individual apps/services to ensure you don’t still have ransomware after the restore.
Some states won’t register kei trucks. They aren’t fast enough for freeway use or something like that.