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by AccountToUse
1706 days ago
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I think it would be the mother load for a ransomware gang. They would have many extortion opportunities. Pay us to get access back to your servers, pay us or we delete your data, pay us or we leak your internal data, pay us or we delete/leak your customers' data. I'm sure that AWS has some of the greatest cybersecurity out there. But the potential massive cash opportunities make it such that why not try some easy attacks against them. Spending millions of dollars of labor to research and pull off an attack is likely only for nation states, but ransomware gangs should be walking by and testing the locks all day every day. |
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I guess the best way to do this without attempting a total shutdown of the dc (while still making off with $xx millions) would be to select a thousand customers, encrypt the hard drives that make up their data redundancy (live, backup, and sharded copies of the data), then ransom that. The only way this doesn't work is if they have all of it in a tape backup, but depending on how much you encrypt, that might be impractical for them to restore if it would cause significant downtime for those customers - and that could be mitigated by selecting petabytes of super-recent data that likely hasn't been backed up to tape yet.