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Fewer Malware being released now, but Ransomware is on the rise

 

According to a report published by Network security company, SonicWall, there was a decline in the Malware attacks in 2016, however at the same time Ransomware attacks multiplied by hundreds.

Ransomware is on the rise

Statistics reveal that unique malware samples collected fell to 60 million as compared with 64 million in 2015, therefore a 6.25 percent decrease. There was a decline in Total attack attempts too, with the figures dropping for the first time to 7.87 billion from 8.19 billion in 2015.

SonicWall’s 2017 Annual Threat Report attributes the drop in Malware attacks to the following reasons:

Ransomware sees a massive jump, steals $1 billion from victims

Ransomware

If you think that Security professionals were successful in curbing Malware attacks, then it was only because their authors were busy making Ransomware.

The meteoric rise of ransomware in 2016 is a cause for concern. The SonicWall Report detected an increase from 3.2 million ransomware attack attempts in 2014 and 3.8 million in 2015 to an astounding 638 million in 2016. Recording an increase of 167 times in 2016.

What worse is that by the end of the first quarter, $209 million in ransom was paid by the companies, and by mid‐2016, almost half of organizations reported being targeted by a ransomware attack in the prior 12 months.

On high profile Ransomware cases of 2016, SonicWall report mentions,

Hollywood Presbyterian Medical Center in Los Angeles admitted to paying $17,000 in bitcoin to regain access to its data in February 2016, while the Lansing Board of Water & Light (BWL) revealed they paid ransomware attackers $25,000 in April 2016.x, xi In the U.K. in September 2016, hosted desktop and cloud provider VESK handed over 29 bitcoins, worth about $22,800 USD at the time.xii And in November 2016, the San Francisco Municipal Transit Authority had to open its fare gates when a ransomware attack took down its payment and email systems, demanding 100 bitcoins, or about $73,000 at the time.

Following were the key Ransomware trends of the year 2016,

Finally, the majority of successful Ransomware attacks were delivered via phishing emails. At times they were also hidden in encrypted traffic, defying even the walls of the SSL.

Other vital findings of the Ransomware attacks, can be read the report here.

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