|
|
|
|
|
by logicallee
3515 days ago
|
|
That last sentence was really uncalled-for. I think you don't really understand that I was discussing an economic argument. Regarding putting a cramp in your style - how about if a thief has stolen your phone with valuable something on it that isn't anywhere else, but you have an application that tells you where the phone is and you own a shotgun. Can you go and get your phone back by force if in your calculation it has a higher chance of actually solving your immediate problem, than involving the police? Why or why not? It's your phone. The thief knows what he did. The thief knows that it's yours. I am not saying that there is no argument on your side of letting people take care of issues directly with criminals (whether by force or transferring ransoms), but there are important arguments on the other side as well. It's certainly not so clear-cut that you can start ending with petty insults (and please check your reply to be substantive if you reply to this.) |
|
So what option does your average user have when confronted with a situation like this? They could call up the police and report it for statistics sake but the police aren't going to be able to fix the problem nor would they really care (unless you're the mayor or some prominent politician). The bad guy is probably not in the same country and there's no way to identify them anyway. Maybe you could figure out the hacking group but if you knew the actual identities then why aren't you working for Interpol already? Also maybe try using a site like in the link to check if the ransomware is compromised. But most likely, you just have to pay the ransom, get back your stuff, and learn an expensive lesson in how important regular backups, online and offline, can be.
You could just not pay it. The hacking group doesn't get their money but it's not like it cost much to run the attack in the first place. They will have someone's data out there that is much more valuable to the victim that will pay.
I compare this to leaving your bike unattended in a public place. Maybe you did a good job trying to lock it up but the thief hacksawed through your cheap lock. Or maybe you just left it unlocked. Either way, your bike is gone. Maybe buy a much stronger lock or two in the future. In this analogy, you aren't getting your bike back. You just have to spend the cash on a new one, expensive but hey, you need a bike to get to/do your job. You can report it stolen but unless there is some big bust and they find the guy, the thief is going to get away with it. Complaining that someone stole your bike isn't going to solve the issue. It sucks that the thief will profit off your loss but the data/bike is already gone. You aren't getting it back unless you drop the cash on a new bike/decryption key. The lesson is that you are going to either have to never ride a bike again (or use a computer, both unlikely) or you will have to use better security to prevent theft of your valuables.
Crime does pay, a lot. People get away with theft like this all the time and there's not much an individual can do except try harder in the future to defend themselves against theft in the future. Secure your computer better, run backups, don't do dumb stuff (like run unknown software or leave a bike unlocked).