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"Cryptolocker" articles you guys may want to read
Posted: Mon Oct 27, 2014 9:55 pm
by cockheroaddict
"Ransomware is particularly vile because it allows for hackers to directly extort money from victims. It can also be very difficult to remove the virus because the device is locked and therefore inaccessible"
http://www.mainstreet.com/article/ranso ... ces/page/2
http://securitywatch.pcmag.com/mobile-s ... ransomware
http://www.pcworld.com/article/2837572/ ... mware.html
Re: "Cryptolocker" articles you guys may want to read
Posted: Tue Oct 28, 2014 3:26 am
by bukem
Re: "Cryptolocker" articles you guys may want to read
Posted: Tue Oct 28, 2014 4:12 am
by catchall
This hit a friend of mine a couple of weeks ago. It was pretty brutal.
Re: "Cryptolocker" articles you guys may want to read
Posted: Tue Oct 28, 2014 12:02 pm
by les
I use genie on my windows and
Time machine on my mac.
The backup drive is divided into two partitions and only connected during the back up process.
I also use a NAS for media files this is backed up to another removable drive, again only
attached during backups
Important emails I also send to myself so I have a copy
And in times of dispute proof I sent it.
Finally I use a pen drive for files i want to access on any machine.
Re: "Cryptolocker" articles you guys may want to read
Posted: Wed Oct 29, 2014 9:12 pm
by tommyfilth
Yeah, these are nasty. I got one on my work machine a few years ago (I wasn't even doing anything sketchy, I just did a GIS for a map of Ankh-Morpork (for Terry Pratchett's Discworld series), and clicked on one of the results and it IMMEDIATELY infected me with a rootkit virus. I was forced to reimage the machine, which ate up the better part of my day and made it really difficult for me to work the tickets in my queue.
The basic rule of thumb I always gave my users was "If it looks overblown it probably is. If you get a pop-up with hundreds of reported issues, and it wants you to pay to remove them, it's almost certainly a scam. Call IT immediately."
What's scary is that some of these scammers have gotten really good at making these things look like legit virus scans. Others, not so much... like this one I saw on a user's machine a few years back:
The terminology it used was so goofy, it made me think of an episode of CSI episode about hacking.
THROWAWAY CHARACTER AT COMPUTER: “Oh no, the disk rotational speed has decreased!”
ATTRACTIVE FEMALE COMPUTER GEEK COP: “That will give the hacker a vector to increase the ram temperature!”
GRUFF COP WITH A HEART OF GOLD: “Laterally increase the GUI cache, that should buy us some time.”
Re: "Cryptolocker" articles you guys may want to read
Posted: Thu Oct 30, 2014 1:08 pm
by book_guy
tommyfilth wrote:
The terminology it used was so goofy, it made me think of an episode of CSI episode about hacking.
THROWAWAY CHARACTER AT COMPUTER: “Oh no, the disk rotational speed has decreased!”
ATTRACTIVE FEMALE COMPUTER GEEK COP: “That will give the hacker a vector to increase the ram temperature!”
GRUFF COP WITH A HEART OF GOLD: “Laterally increase the GUI cache, that should buy us some time.”
You have a future at "The Onion."

Re: "Cryptolocker" articles you guys may want to read
Posted: Thu Oct 30, 2014 8:18 pm
by les
tommyfilth wrote:
The terminology it used was so goofy, it made me think of an episode of CSI episode about hacking.
THROWAWAY CHARACTER AT COMPUTER: “Oh no, the disk rotational speed has decreased!”
ATTRACTIVE FEMALE COMPUTER GEEK COP: “That will give the hacker a vector to increase the ram temperature!”
GRUFF COP WITH A HEART OF GOLD: “Laterally increase the GUI cache, that should buy us some time.”
You forgot the golden rule of showbiz.
"It's amazing what you can do when the scriptwriter is on your side."