Ransomware: Which Industries Are Most Likely to Pay
Paying a ransom is the worst possible strategy for addressing ransomware attacks.
Lital Asher-Dotan
As hacker techniques have hastily evolved becoming far more complex, it is no secret that the adversary is now more than ever extremely elusive and difficult to detect. In Cybereason's upcoming webinar, Yonatan Striem-Amit, Cybereason CTO and co-founder, and Lital Asher-Dotan, Marketing Director, will discuss new methods that will reveal a complete hacking operation, in real-time.
In an age where sophisticated hacking operations are a fact of life, don't wait! Join us on March 4th, 2015 at 1 pm ET to get into the hacker mindset and learn how to immediately detect privileges escalation, C&C, DGA-based attacks and more!
Lital is a Marketing Team Leader, Storyteller, Technology Marketing Expert. She joined Cybereason as the first marketing hire and built a full marketing department. Specializing in brand building, product marketing, communication and content. Passionate about building ROI-driven marketing teams.
Paying a ransom is the worst possible strategy for addressing ransomware attacks.
The study once again finds that ‘it doesn’t pay-to-pay’ a ransom demand, as 80% of organizations that paid were hit by ransomware a second time, with 68% saying the second attack came in less than a month with threat actors demanding a higher ransom amount...
Paying a ransom is the worst possible strategy for addressing ransomware attacks.
The study once again finds that ‘it doesn’t pay-to-pay’ a ransom demand, as 80% of organizations that paid were hit by ransomware a second time, with 68% saying the second attack came in less than a month with threat actors demanding a higher ransom amount...
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