Fox News contributor and former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo reacts to Biden s joint address to Congress
Political hand-wringing in Washington over Russia’s hacking of federal agencies and interference in U.S. politics has mostly overshadowed a worsening digital scourge with a far broader wallop: crippling and dispiriting extortionary ransomware attacks by cybercriminal mafias that mostly operate in foreign safe havens out of the reach of Western law enforcement.
Stricken in the United States alone last year were more than 100 federal, state and municipal agencies, upwards of 500 health care centers,1,680 educational institutions and untold thousands of businesses, according to the cybersecurity firm Emsisoft. Dollar losses are in the tens of billions. Accurate numbers are elusive. Many victims shun reporting, fearing the reputational blight.
Ransomware attacks: What are they? Can they be stopped?
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EXPLAINER: No ransomware silver bullet, crooks out of reach
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EXPLAINER: No ransomware silver bullet, crooks out of reach
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