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naturist's avatar
May 05, 2016

Ransom Ware

I was just reading a computer-specific forum I hang out in, and noted a lot of discussion about Ransomware, and that a lot of people and businesses are being taken in by an email ostensibly from a family member, trusted business associate, or a potential client with an attachment that turns out to be the crypto ware.

There was also a case of someone getting an email from the company's owner directing her to write a check for a significant sum and mail it to a name/address she did not recognize. She dutifully wrote the check, stuck it in an envelope and stamped it, and was about to drop it in the mail when that owner called her about another matter, and in the course of the conversation, she inquired about this new name, only to learn that the boss knew nothing about it. His email had been faked and his email address forged (which, btw, is very easy to do). They had almost been scammed out of that money. She was wondering if there were any way to safeguard email communications and verify authorship.

And it turns out that there is. The commercially available PGP encryption software and it's freeware open source implementation known as GPG both afford us all both email encryption and independently a way to sign and verify email and its attachments. There are Mac, Windows, Linux, Android, and iOS implementations of the GPG software. I know of at least Mac and Windows versions of PGP.

Just a heads up for those interested.
  • This is the reason that every email that I send has From XXXX in the subject line. Everyone that knows me know that I do this and NOT to open anything from me without this in the subject line.

    My Cousin crashes her computer quite often, which I have to try and fix. Since I "Trained her to do this, I have saved my system from getting nailed after she got hit again.
  • As I mentioned in another thread, the only real protection against ransomware is making periodic backups, secured from direct write access. Whether you do so by disconnecting the cable, powering off, or restricting write privileges to a backup drive.

    Though the FBI and Interpol have shut down cryptoware servers in the past, they come back on line fairly rapidly in another form. Most likely as they are making hundreds of millions of dollars with this scam. Which means, they are not going away.

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