• Push to ban ransomware =?utf-8?Q?payments_?= =?utf-8?Q?following_Australia=E2=80=99s?= biggest cyberattack [telecom]

    From The Telecom Digest@submissions@telecom-digest.org to comp.dcom.telecom on Wed Apr 12 13:47:35 2023
    From Newsgroup: comp.dcom.telecom

    By Luke Huigsloot

    The hack on Latitude Financial is AustraliarCOs biggest cyberattack,
    with driverrCOs license numbers, passports and financial documents among
    the stolen information.

    The Australian government is being pushed to ban the payment of cyber
    ransoms, usually demanded in cryptocurrency, following a local
    business suffering a mass data breach and subsequent ransom demand.

    https://cointelegraph.com/news/push-to-ban-ransomware-payments-following-australia-s-biggest-cyber-attack

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  • From Marco Moock@mo01@posteo.de to comp.dcom.telecom on Wed Apr 12 16:29:43 2023
    From Newsgroup: comp.dcom.telecom

    Am 12.04.2023 um 13:47:35 Uhr schrieb The Telecom Digest:

    The Australian government is being pushed to ban the payment of cyber ransoms, usually demanded in cryptocurrency, following a local
    business suffering a mass data breach and subsequent ransom demand.

    I think this is a good idea. Paying the attackers [just] makes this
    attacking method lucrative.

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  • From Bill Horne@tdmoderator@telecomdigest.net to comp.dcom.telecom on Wed Apr 12 15:55:14 2023
    From Newsgroup: comp.dcom.telecom

    On Wed, Apr 12, 2023 at 04:29:43PM +0200, Marco Moock wrote:
    Am 12.04.2023 um 13:47:35 Uhr schrieb The Telecom Digest:

    The Australian government is being pushed to ban the payment of cyber ransoms, usually demanded in cryptocurrency, following a local
    business suffering a mass data breach and subsequent ransom demand.

    I think this is a good idea. Paying the attackers [just] makes this
    attacking method lucrative.

    In the early days of the PC revolution, when the machines were being
    introduced into schools, I met an "IT" guy who complained about the "unbelieveable" number of viruses that the PC's were picking up.

    I offered to solve the problem, and I changed all the PC's in the
    "Computer Lab" over to BOOtP operaton, so that they would download
    their operating system from the lab's server instead of their own hard
    drives. I removed the OS from the hard drives to prevent any attempt
    to bypass the BOOTP startup, and set each BIOS to require a password
    in order to change the boot options.

    After that, I told the teachers whom were using the computer lab that
    when a student complained of a virus or other mysterious problems, to
    "Just tell the student to stop doing whatever he was doing before,"
    and to confiscate whatever floppy disk was in the PC, and then turn
    that student's PC off and back on again, so that it would reload the
    OS from the server.

    After I cashed the check, I got the teachers together again, and told
    them that their students had been deliberately bringing infected disks
    into their lab to avoid the hard work of learning how to use the
    programs they were being asked to study.

    The teachers decided that, from then on, they would destroy any floppy
    disks that were in the PC's where an infection was found. One of them
    suggested using scissors to cut open the flppy disks and discarding
    the pieces while the entire class watched (this was when 5.25 inch
    floppy disks were being used). A few parents complained, the teachers
    told me later, but they would always back off when they were told that
    the floppy disks were evidence of a crime, and that the teachers were destroying them to save their students from getting a criminal record.

    Remove the reward, obviate the risk.

    Bill Horne

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