Ransomware is now a global epidemic. It strikes an estimated 40% of businesses in the US, UK, Canada and Germany. It now is hitting one out of every six consumers, according to Kaspersky Lab.
Today, ransomware has replaced credit card theft as the preferred scam of online criminals. And they are extorting billions globally.
And the epidemic is nearly silent because few want to admit they’ve been victimized and blackmailed into paying ransom.
Come to the next Internet Caucus Advisory Committee briefing to learn:
- What is ransomware?
- Can ransomware be decrypted?
- Should victims pay or fight back?
- What are the legal implications?
- What is the federal government doing to assist and inform victims?
Date: Monday, November 14th, 12:00 pm to 1:00 pm
Location: Rayburn House Office Building, Room 2226
Register: Via Eventbrite here.
Follow: @NetCaucusAC | #stopransomware
Speakers
- The Honorable Phillip J. Bond, former US Under Secretary of Commerce for Technology (Bio)
- Dante Disparte, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Risk Cooperative (Bio)
- Richard Downing, Acting Deputy Assistant Attorney General, U.S. Department of Justice (Bio)
- Ryan Naraine, Kaspersky Lab (Bio)
- Danielle Sheer, General Counsel, Carbonite (Bio)
Key Statistics:
- About 2 in 5 businesses in the US, Canada, UK and Germany have been victims of ransomware.
- Kaspersky Lab estimates that more than 1 in 6 consumers have been victimized.
- Criminals usually give their victims just 12-96 hours to respond. Ransomware is replacing credit card theft as cyber-criminals’ preferred scam of choice in 2016.
- Carbonite reports that ransomware attacks grew 300% from Q1 2015 to Q1 2016. The Cisco 2016 Midyear Cybersecurity Report described one campaign that attacked at least 90,000 servers per day and netted cybercriminals about $34 million in annual profits.