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Following a Breach at ION Group, LockBit Hackers Received a Ransom

Ransoms should not be paid, according to the National Cyber Security Centre of the UK.
LockBit hackers who took credit for a severe hack at financial data company ION claim that a ransom was paid, although they would not specify the sum or provide any proof that the payment had been transferred. Meanwhile, the ION Group chose not to comment on the situation. 

The British spying intelligence agency GCHQ's National Cyber Security Agency told Reuters there's nothing further to add. A key to access the files should be provided by the hacking gang if a ransom is paid. As per cybersecurity experts, ransomware often demands the individual file-by-file decryption of computer servers, which can involve days or weeks. Additionally, a machine that has had its data decrypted cannot be trusted after that point and must be wiped clean and rebuilt from scratch. PCs often speed up the process.

After a business pays a ransom, additional ransomware gangs might try to extort them once more by using the company's IT system flaws. Considering to be completely secure, ransomware victims might seek to redesign their technical infrastructure.

In addition, victims' files are kidnapped by LockBit, the group behind the ION assault, which also demands payment by February 4 to prevent their disclosure.

Ransoms should not be paid, according to the National Cyber Security Centre of the UK, 42 of ION's clients were impacted by the early-morning Tuesday attack. Eventually, it caused several banks and brokers in Europe and the US to conduct some trades manually, thus setting them back for decades. About the attack, the FBI has contacted ION management.

LockBit Ransomware Group

In certain cases, the affiliate of LockBit 3.0 is required to start the ransomware binary using a 32-character password. The typical assault procedure consists of infecting the device, encrypting files, removing specific services, and changing the device's background image.

The information can be offered for sale on the dark web if the ransom is not paid. Cobalt Strike, a security testing tool, and a series of malware attacks have been linked to LockBit 3.0's abuse of Windows Defender.

Operating with affiliates who may lack the means to develop and launch attacks, LockBit uses a ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) business model. The associated hacker in this case receives a percentage of the ransom, based on a December 2022 warning from the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services.

Among the most expensive and disruptive concerns for businesses globally in recent years has been ransomware. Several ransomware groups not only encrypt a victim's files in exchange for a ransom payment, but they also steal data and threaten to expose it online as an added inducement to pay up.

Numerous brokers have experienced difficulties as a result of the exchange-traded financial derivatives trading and clearance being impacted by the ransomware attack on ION. Reuters reports that among the numerous ION customers whose operations have been interrupted are ABN Amro Clearing and Intesa Sanpaolo, the largest bank in Italy.

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