Times Colonist

Russia-based ransomware gang offline, but cause not clear

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WASHINGTON — The Russia-based criminal syndicate behind a devastatin­g series of recent ransomware attacks was offline on Tuesday, but cybersecur­ity experts said that it was premature to speculate why and that there was no indication of a lawenforce­ment takedown.

REvil’s dark web data-leak site and ransom-negotiatin­g portals were both unreachabl­e, cybersecur­ity researcher­s said. The group was responsibl­e for the Memorial Day ransomware attack on the meat processor JBS and the supply-chain attack this month targeting the software company Kaseya that crippled well over 1,000 businesses globally.

President Joe Biden told Russian President Vladimir Putin on a call Friday that he needed to rein in attacks from Russiabase­d groups and warned that the U.S. had the right to defend its people and critical infrastruc­ture from attacks.

But there were no immediate or public signs that the government had anything to do with REvil appearing offline. It was also possible that the group was laying low after the attack, or switching methods “as we did expose them,” said threat researcher Ryan Sherstobit­off of SecuritySc­orecard.

“It could be that the server hardware failed, or that it was intentiona­lly taken down, or that someone attacked their host,” said Sean Gallagher, a threat researcher at the cybersecur­ity firm Sophos. He noted that REvil’s public ransom-negotiatin­g site was also down last week.

Spokespeop­le for the White House and U.S. CyberComma­nd, the Pentagon’s cyber arm, declined to comment on Tuesday.

“We have seen no indicators for either voluntary shutdown nor of any offensive steps from law enforcemen­t,” said Alex Holden, founder and chief informatio­n security officer of Hold Security. “Right now, perhaps, it is too early to speculate, especially as REvil was building up their strength over the recent months.”

“There is always a glimmer of hope that Russia is finally doing something right,” he added.

Ransomware variants have previously disappeare­d as the criminals behind them retooled and modified their malware before introducin­g it under a new guise. That’s what threat analysts believe happened with a precursor to the REvil ransomware-as-a-service software called Gandcrab. It was the most successful variant over a 15-month run that began in January 2018.

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