How ransomware creeps cash out their payments

Brian Krebs offers an in-depth look at a “cashout” service used by ransomware crooks to get money from their victims. Ransomware is malicious software that encrypts your personal files and demands that you pay a ransom for the key to decrypt them; the crooks who run the attacks demand that their victims buy prepaid MoneyPak cards and send the numbers for them by way of payment. But converting MoneyPaks to cash is tricky — one laundry, which pipes the money through a horse/dog-track betting service — charges a 60% premium. * The ransomware victims who agree to purchase MoneyPak vouchers to regain control over their PCs. * The guys operating the botnets that are pushing ransomware, locking up victim PCs, and extracting MoneyPak voucher codes from victims. * The guy(s) running this cashout service. * The “cashiers” or “cashers” on the back end who are taking the Moneypak codes submitted to the cashing service, linking those codes to fraudulently-obtained prepaid debit cards, and then withdrawing the funds via ATMs and wiring the proceeds back to the cashing service, minus their commission. The cashing service then credits a percentage of the MoneyPak voucher code values to the ransomware peddler’s account. How much does the cashout service charge for all this work? More than half of the value of the MoneyPaks, it would seem. When a user logs in to the criminal service, he is greeted with the following message: “Dear clients, due to decrease of infection rate on exploits we are forced to lift the price. The price is now 0.6. And also, I explained the rules for returns many times, we return only cheques which return on my side if you cash them out after then we lock the account! There are many clients who don’t return anything, and I will work only with these people now. I warn you.” Cashout Service for Ransomware Scammers        

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How ransomware creeps cash out their payments

FiOS User Finds Limit of ‘Unlimited’ Data Plan: 77 TB/Month

An anonymous reader writes “A California user of Verizon’s FiOS fiber-optic internet service put his unlimited data plan to the test. Over the month of March, he totaled over 77 terabytes of internet traffic, which finally prompted a call from a Verizon employee to see what he was doing. The user had switched to a 300Mbps/65Mbps plan in January, and averaged 50 terabytes of traffic per month afterward. ‘An IT professional who manages a test lab for an Internet storage company, [the user] has been providing friends and family a personal VPN, video streaming, and peer-to-peer file service—running a rack of seven servers with 209TB of raw storage in his house.’ The Verizon employee who contacted him said he was violating the service agreement. “Basically he said that my bandwidth usage was excessive (like 30,000 percent higher than their average customer),” [the user] said. ‘[He] wanted to know WTF I was doing. I told him I have a full rack and run servers, and then he said, “Well, that’s against our ToS.” And he said I would need to switch to the business service or I would be disconnected in July. It wasn’t a super long call.'” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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FiOS User Finds Limit of ‘Unlimited’ Data Plan: 77 TB/Month

World of Warcraft Loses 1.3 Million Players in First Quarter of 2013

hypnosec writes “World of Warcarft, the gaming industry’s most popular franchise and one of Blizzard’s cash cows, is bleeding subscribers with 1.3 million defecting from the game in the first quarter of 2013 alone. Blizzard revealed a subscriber decline of over 14%, the total now standing at 8.3 million in their earnings call press release (PDF).” Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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World of Warcraft Loses 1.3 Million Players in First Quarter of 2013

Adobe kills Creative Suite, goes subscription-only

Just a year after launching its $50-per-month plan, Adobe has made its Creative Cloud the only way to get the new versions of its full software suite. Customers “overwhelmingly” prefer it. [Read more]        

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Adobe kills Creative Suite, goes subscription-only