Power Raid
We Exist To Win Premierships
- Joined
- Oct 15, 2004
- Posts
- 80,463
- Reaction score
- 72,332
- Location
- West Perth
- AFL Club
- Port Adelaide
- Other Teams
- Fremantle
Medibank have publicly stated that they won't be paying the hackers.
Perhaps it should be made illegal to pay a ransom for a data breach? It would encourage companies to make sure their systems are secure, in the knowledge that they can't buy their way out of it after the event. Anyhow, there's no guarantee that paying up will ensure the data will not be released or passed on to other criminals. And it might deter the hackers, knowing they are not going to get a big pay day.
The Medibank hackers, or whoever they sold the data to, are now targeting individual customers by calling them with knowledge of their medical claims, and saying they have unpaid bills. They will catch a few people out but it's not something a company should consider paying a ransom for.
Ransomware is a different category of scam. A business not having access to its systems or data can shut it down, possibly permanently. There's a cost benefit analysis involved. And there's a greater probability that once the ransom has been paid and the hack removed that the threat will be over. Apparently 43% of Australian companies paid ransoms after ransomware attacks.
I have worked in areas where ISIS and abu sayyaf operate and we managed to get them out of these organisation by offering proper jobs.
I wonder if the same could be achieved with hackers?
perhaps they do it because of no other alternative.



