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US links Thanos and Jigsaw ransomware to 55-year-old doctor
US links Thanos and Jigsaw ransomware to 55-year-old doctor
The US Department of Justice today said that Moises Luis Zagala Gonzalez (Zagala), a 55-year-old cardiologist with French and Venezuelan citizenship residing in Ciudad Bolivar, Venezuela, created and rented Jigsaw and Thanos ransomware to cybercriminals.
·bleepingcomputer.com·
US links Thanos and Jigsaw ransomware to 55-year-old doctor
Ransomware-as-a-service: Understanding the cybercrime gig economy and how to protect yourself
Ransomware-as-a-service: Understanding the cybercrime gig economy and how to protect yourself
Microsoft coined the term “human-operated ransomware” to clearly define a class of attack driven by expert humane intelligence at every step of the attack chain and culminate in intentional business disruption and extortion. In this blog, we explain the ransomware-as-a-service affiliate model and disambiguate between the attacker tools and the various threat actors at play during a security incident.
·microsoft.com·
Ransomware-as-a-service: Understanding the cybercrime gig economy and how to protect yourself
Costa Rica declares national emergency after Conti ransomware attacks
Costa Rica declares national emergency after Conti ransomware attacks
The Costa Rican President Rodrigo Chaves has declared a national emergency following cyber attacks from Conti ransomware group on multiple government bodies. BleepingComputer also observed Conti published most of the 672 GB dump that appears to contain data belonging to the Costa Rican government agencies. The declaration was signed into law by Chaves on Sunday, May 8th, same day as the economist and former Minister of Finance effectively became the country's 49th and current president.
·bleepingcomputer.com·
Costa Rica declares national emergency after Conti ransomware attacks
New Python-based Ransomware Targeting JupyterLab Web Notebooks
New Python-based Ransomware Targeting JupyterLab Web Notebooks
Researchers have disclosed what they say is the first-ever Python-based ransomware strain specifically designed to target exposed Jupyter notebooks, a web-based interactive computing platform that allows editing and running programs via a browser. "The attackers gained initial access via misconfigured environments, then ran a ransomware script that encrypts every file on a given path on the server and deletes itself after execution to conceal the attack," Assaf Morag, a data analyst at Aqua Security, said in a report.
·thehackernews.com·
New Python-based Ransomware Targeting JupyterLab Web Notebooks