The No More Ransom project celebrates its sixth anniversary today after helping millions of ransomware victims recover their files for free.
Ransomware continues to be active this week, with new threat actors releasing new features, No More Ransom turning five, and a veteran group rebrands.
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The No More Ransom project celebrates its fifth anniversary today after helping over six million ransomware victims recover their files and saving them almost €1 billion in ransomware payments.
The No More Ransom Project celebrates its fourth anniversary today after helping over 4.2 million visitors recover from a ransomware infection and saving an estimated $632 million in ransom payments.
Today marks the third anniversary of No More Ransom and through its partners from the public and private sectors, law enforcement, academia, and researchers, the project has been able to help hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of victims get their encrypted files back for free.
Slow week with ransomware news as we lead up into the holidays. Mostly small variants that won't get much distribution or releases of new variants of older ransomware.
BleepingComputer is humbled and honored to announce that we have joined NoMoreRansom.org as an associate partner! We have been providing ransomware information, support, and the amazing decryptors from Michael Gillespie since the beginning and this partnership will enable more victims to receive the help they need.
Belgian Federal Police together with Kaspersky Lab have released a free decryption tool for some versions of the Cryakl ransomware.
Lots of small little ransomware updates with no big news from any major Ransomware distributions. The biggest stories this week is the 450k earned by the Samas group, Cerber being distributed as credit card payment notifications, and more associated partners to No More Ransom.
Ever since it launched in April 2016, the ID Ransomware service has been slowly, but surely, becoming the default destination for victims looking for information to aid them in solving their ransomware infections.