Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: Monitoring WannaCry hackers' bitcoin addresses in real time
by
Korporal
on 14/05/2017, 02:48:10 UTC
If it was $20 instead, I would probably pay it anyway, but there's really no point.

Yes, that's why they don't really target individuals. But if they've found a couple of sloppy companies, jackpot!


I assume the following:
- that some institutions reverted to clean backups
- there are more than 3 addresses
- spread was stopped by a blogger who discovered a kill switch in the virus (this has been verified) - https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2017/may/13/accidental-hero-finds-kill-switch-to-stop-spread-of-ransomware-cyber-attack

There have to be more than 3 addresses. And it's Saturday, many companies cannot access their money until the banks open Monday. Only then we'll see how big the damage is...
Do you really think that those big companies that are affected by the virus will be paying bitcoins to decrypt their infected files? I think they just get specialist to remove the ransomware, but I am not sure if that is even possible with this big infection from last week.

If the files are truly encrypted, removing the ransomware will not get the files back. Unless there is a clean backup you either lose the data or pay the ransom, and there is no guarantee that the key to decrypt will be supplied.

Not necessarily.
If your files are on magnetic HD and not on an SSD, you could try to recover encrypted files by using a decent file recovery program. As long as the encryption process doesn't do too many passes on the file location on the platter you "might" be able to recover the original version.
Haven't tried it but its worth a shot. What other options do you have?
I've recovered files deleted 8 years ago off a customers pc a few years ago. BTW, I was using forensic-level recovery programs tho.