According to the Boston Globe, the
Tewksbury, Massachusetts, police department was so desperate to get the
information from their computers that had been encrypted by hackers,
they ended up paying the requested sum of $500 for the decryption key.
And they aren't the only police department that has resorted to paying
hackers in so-called "ransomware" schemes. From the Globe:
"At first, the problems with the Tewksbury Police Department system — difficulty calling up arrest and incident records — seemed to be just the usual system crankiness. No big deal.Because they hadn't backed up their systems, the Tewksbury Police were in a terrible position. Read the rest of the story, as well as that of the other U.S. police departments that have fallen victim to the same schemes, at the Boston Globe.
That was when the menacing message popped up on the screen, an explanation in the form of a ransom note:
But it persisted, and a technician was called in.
“Your personal files are encrypted,” it read. “File decryption costs ~ $500.”
It continued: “If you really value your data, then we suggest you do not waste valuable time searching for other solutions because they do not exist."
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