Paying Ransom Doesn’t End the Threat, It Often Makes It Worse
When a business decides to pay a ransomware demand, many believe it marks the end of the ordeal. Unfortunately, as recent research shows, it may only be the beginning.
When a business decides to pay a ransomware demand, many believe it marks the end of the ordeal. Unfortunately, as recent research shows, it may only be the beginning.
Ransomware is rising again and this time it is more fragmented, unpredictable, and dangerous than ever.
Ransomware is making a comeback. According to a recent article from the cybersecurity outlet B2B Cyber Security, 2025 has seen a clear and significant rise in ransomware incidents. The report...
In November 2025, Anthropic disclosed a startling development in cyber‑threats. According to its report, a China‑linked state‑sponsored threat actor abused Anthropic’s AI coding tool, Claude Code, to...
In October 2025, Google revealed that a sophisticated cyberattack targeting Oracle E Business Suite likely compromised more than 100 companies worldwide. This information comes directly from the...
A new ransomware actor known as The Gentlemen has quickly become one of the most concerning groups to emerge in 2025. Their tactics show how quickly modern attackers can bypass traditional...
In November 2025, Google Chrome rushed out a security update after discovering a critical zero-day in its V8 JavaScript engine.
When companies fall victim to ransomware one painful lesson has become clear: paying the ransom does not end the nightmare. Rather, it often marks the beginning of repeated attacks. A recent...
The ransomware landscape continues to worsen, and the latest report on Akira ransomware makes this clearer than ever.
When Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) announced in November 2025 that a cyberattack had cost the company £196 million (about $220 million) in just one quarter it shocked the automotive and industrial...