Ransomware has surged — Why the attacks are ‘going crazy right now’

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Ransomware cyberattacks have skyrocketed, and no part of the economy is safe. From infrastructure companies like Colonial Pipeline to meat producers like JBS to a huge attack linked to Russia just over the Fourth of July weekend, the attacks have escalated.

According to George Kurtz, CEO of cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike (CRWD), the company is seeing a “massive” increase in ransomware attacks. And they’re targeting everything from private businesses to government entities.

“Ransomware is going crazy right now. What we’ve seen at CrowdStrike, is...almost 50 attacks per week, targeted attacks,” Kurtz told Yahoo Finance. “And it’s only getting worse.”

The most recent high-profile attack saw IT remote management software maker Kaseya hit by a supply chain-style ransomware attack, which impacted as many as 1,500 businesses. The suspected group behind the attack, REvil, is seeking a $70 million ransom to call it off.

What’s turned ransomware from a nuisance crime that impacted everyday people via email scams to a national security-level threat? A new business model for cybercriminals, a lack of accountability on the parts of foreign governments, and plenty of money to go around.

Cybercriminals have created a dangerous business model

Cybercriminal gangs like REvil (which stands for Ransomware Evil) have a business model that allows them to contract out their ransomware to smaller gangs that launch attacks.

“They have an affiliate model where anybody who contributes to the successful ransomware payment gets a profit share in the ransom,” explained Liam O’ Murchu, director of Symantec’s (AVGO) Security Response Group.

“They've got a lot of people in the cybercriminal underground, who want to help and want to participate in these attacks, and basically sucked the air out of all of the other economic models that were in the underground,” O’ Murchu said. “This is the biggest game in town right now.”

Cybercriminals have also taken their attacks to a new level that forces companies to respond as quickly as possible. In a normal ransomware attack, criminals target victims’ computer systems by encrypting them and keeping them locked down until the victims pay a ransom for the digital keys to regain access to their files.

FILE - In this Oct. 12, 2020 file photo, a worker heads into the JBS meatpacking plant in Greeley, Colo.  A weekend ransomware attack on the world’s largest meat company is disrupting production around the world just weeks after a similar incident shut down a U.S. oil pipeline. The White House confirms that Brazil-based meat processor JBS SA notified the U.S. government Sunday, May 30, 2021, of a ransom demand from a criminal organization likely based in Russia.  (AP Photo/David Zalubowski, File)
JBS was hit with a massive cyberattack that took its systems offline. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski, File) · ASSOCIATED PRESS

More recently, however, cybercriminals have added a new threat. Now in addition to locking down victims’ systems, they’ll exfiltrate sensitive data and threaten to release it online if the victims don’t pay up quickly.

It’s not just sensitive corporate information either, O’ Murchu explained.

“Recently...a CEO of one of the companies that [cybercriminals] got into was having an affair with someone...and they leaked photographs of the person he was having the affair with,” he said. “They also get the phone numbers of the executives and they call them on the phone to put pressure on them.”