Actively keeping your systems safe

Ultimately, some organizations feel compelled to make a decision about whether or not to pay a ransom. Factors that may force this decision more rapidly include a need to resume operations as quickly as possible, or to regain access to important files that cannot be recovered by other methods. The main reasons to consider payment should be the potential loss of lives or the potential for the company to collapse entirely if operations are not restored immediately. Both paying a ransom and deciding not to pay carry consequences.

Paying a ransom can be a federal offense

Decisions should be tightly linked with the organization’s risk management, business continuity goals and downtime costs, regulatory considerations, legal implications, and the possibility that the criminals will not provide the means to decrypt all files or attempt to extort more money even if they are paid. Generally, any decision to pay a ransom must involve the relevant stakeholders from inside the company. At the same time, it is wise to seek counsel from incident response subject matter experts and understand the terms and services offered by the company’s cyber insurance provider. If a ransom negotiator is going to be part of the process, they may be able to offer insights from previous cases with the same cybercriminal group. This section lists the main topics companies should consider if the decision to pay a ransom is being discussed.

Patch vulnerabilities

Depending on the results of your root cause analysis, if the attack was made possible by vulnerable systems, those will have to be patched to prevent them from being re-exploited in the future. If those systems cannot be patched, segregate, place compensating controls, and ensure the exposure to risk has been minimized.

Paying a ransom does not guarantee recovery

Paying criminals is precisely what it sounds like — paying an untrusted party. Criminals may or may not fulfill their part of the deal after they have been paid, especially since they can vanish as soon as the (irreversible) payment is made. While most cybercriminals will provide a means to decrypt files once payment is made, it is quite possible for them to not do so.

Paying a ransom does not equal instant recovery

If a ransom is paid and a decryption key is provided, keep in mind that recovering with a decryption key is seldom instantaneous. Decrypting files is a manual task and they must be decrypted individually, which can be a painstaking and time-consuming undertaking. In most cases, even if the criminals are paid and provide the decryption key, the recovery effort can be just as complex and strenuous as reimaging machines. That means recovery efforts could be just as costly as if the adversaries had not been paid.

Paying a ransom can be a federal offense

Paying a ransom can be a federal offense

The increasing demand to pay ransomware attackers has given rise to a new kind of business: Ransomware negotiators. Private firms in this new domain offer to help companies negotiate and pay ransoms for a fee, but there are considerations beyond negotiating skills to examine when deciding whether or not to pay a ransom.

Some countries are under sanctions by the U.S. Government, and as a result, paying ransom to cybercriminals from those countries can be a federal offense. On October 1, 2020, an advisory from Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) served notice about potential fines for all those involved in aiding payments to attackers from sanctioned countries, which include Russia, North Korea or Iran. Firms that offer ransomware negotiation services and the clients they represent are not exempt from this advisory

Paying cybercriminals strengthens their business model

Paying cybercriminals reinforces their business model, encourages more criminals to take part in the same activity, and continually funds both cybercrime and other crimes that are supported by that ecosystem. Keep in mind that paying a ransom ultimately serves as motivation for adversaries to increase both frequency of attacks and the price of the ransom itself

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