By Allan Lengel
The non-profit news organization ProPublica has some bad news if you’re hoping the FBI will defend America against the menacing and dangerous practice called ransomware.
Reporters Renee Dudley and Daniel Golden conclude that the FBI can’t keep pace with the problem because it lacks enough agents with advanced computer skills, it hasn’t recruited as many of these people as it needs and it has a problem retaining them.
Ransomware involves hackers extorting money by locking out companies, institutions and governments from accessing their computers until they pay a ransom.
ProPublica writes:
“There are many factors behind the stunning rise of ransomware. Our reporting found that one of the most important is the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s outmoded approach to computer crime targeting people and institutions in the United States.
“State and local police generally can’t handle a sophisticated international crime that locks victims’ data remotely — from patients’ medical histories and corporate trade secrets to police evidence and students’ performance records — and demands payment for a key. Many police departments have themselves been hamstrung by ransomware attacks. Federal investigators, especially the F.B.I., are responsible for containing the threat. They need to do better.
“When ransomware gained traction a decade ago, individual attackers were hitting up home users for a few hundred dollars. In 2015, as the crime was evolving into something more, the bureau still dismissed ransomware as an ‘ankle biter.’ That year, about a dozen frustrated Cyber Division agents warned James Comey, who was then the director of the F.B.I., that institutional lack of respect for their skills was spurring their departures. Now well-organized gangs, with hierarchies mirroring those of traditional businesses, are paralyzing the computer networks of high-profile targets and demanding millions of dollars in ransom.”