Victim Stung for BTC 22 as DoppelPaymer Scammers Claim Latest Victim

Bitcoin Crime Hack
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Jaroslaw Adamowski
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A hapless victim has reportedly forked out a whopping BTC 22 – worth over USD 263,000 – to DoppelPaymer ransomware scammers, per data published by tracking website ScamAlert.

Source: Adobe/Shutter2U

Earlier this year, antivirus software developer Avast warned that there had been a recent resurgence in scammers making use of the notorious ransomware.

Like other, similar malware, DoppelPaymer locks the victim’s hard drives, encrypts them, and demands that ransoms be paid in crypto.

Avast stated that DoppelPaymer users incorporate virus-themed email subject lines to “attract victims.”

The company added,

“This one is significant in the number of different distribution methods that have been used in the three years since its progenitor, BitPaymer, was first discovered. What makes DoppelPaymer nastier than your average ransomware [is the fact that] its authors post its success stories online, which has a double intent of shaming the victims and making it easier for the press to validate the breach.”

The hackers are also developing ransomware by investing in an affiliate model, paying a range of specialists to distribute DoppelPaymer – and using a range of phishing traps to dupe unsuspecting victims.

The ransomware has been used to devastating effect in the past. Avast says it was used on an attack on the IT network of the city of Torrance, California, last March, whereby municipal backups were erased and encrypted – with more than 200 GB of data stolen.

Some Reddit users said they were puzzled as to why the victim would choose to pay such a steep ransom instead of simply reformatting their hard drive.

One Redditor wrote,

“When it comes to forking over a quarter of a million USD or reformatting my computer, I am pretty sure I’d be inclined to choose the latter. I can’t think of what any files valuable enough to be willing to make that exchange, could even be.”

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Learn more:
Hack Forces Travel Company to Pay USD 4.6m in Bitcoin Ransom
Hackers Attack Telecom Argentina, Demand USD 7.5m In Monero
UK Court Freezes a Ransomware-linked Bitcoin Account on Bitfinex

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