Cult videogame company Capcom pays a big round $0.00 to ransomware crooks


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Japanese video game company Capcom has been in the news recently for all the wrong reasons.

The company suffered a ransomware attack earlier this month, apparently at the hands of the Ragnar Locker gang, and has been having a hard time with the criminals since.

Rumours have suggested that the crooks opened the bidding with eight digits’ worth of blackmail, demanding $11,000,000 in cryptocurrency in return for two things:

  • A decryptor to recover files scrambled in the attack.
  • A promise not to reveal corporate data stolen before the files were scrambled.

More precisely, if what we’ve seen is the actual ransom note from the Capcom attack, the crooks aren’t really promising anything.

The wording is more menacing that that, warning in stilted English that: “If No Deal made then all your data will be Published and/or Sold through an auction to third parties.

Ransomware crooks, of course, can never prove that they really do delete the stolen files of victims who pay up; they can’t prove that they didn’t sell them on already; and they certainly aren’t going to be able to reassure any victims that the files they stole haven’t already been stolen from them in turn.

And in this case, the crooks aren’t even bothering to say they wont’t keep the files if they receive the blackmail money.

They’re just saying that they definitely will leak them if they don’t get paid.

Just because criminals can break into your network doesn’t mean they’re any good at securing their own network, or even that they feel they need to bother with security themselves as long as it’s only your files lying around on their servers to be stolen, and not their ill-gotten cryptocurrency.