Why is Ransom Paid? Panic, Perverse Incentives and Bluffs. 

It is rarely in the best interest of the victim to pay ransom! Although the narrative often is “Because they have no choice” or “It is to protect people from the leak.” This is a complete myth, and it tends to be advanced by those who have paid ransom before, as a way of covering their terrible and avoidable behavior. Nobody owns this untrue narrative more than the insurance underwriters who normalized this behavior.

The problem with something like ransomware is that most companies are willing to pay ransom, and as long as this remains true it will be a persistent problem and only get worse.  Ransomware has become so entrenched and is so easy and cheap to pull off, it will not subside until it becomes substantially difficult to succeed in a ransomware attack and make money doing so.  Unfortunately, there have been no efforts to reduce ransom payments.

It is important to never forget exactly what is paid for, with money American companies pay
(Source)

When ransomware gangs lock down a system, they are frequently the first people the victims hear from and they will do their best to instill fear, create panic and make the situation seem much worse than it is.  They will often claim that they will soon delete the data or raise their price for restoration.  Paying for data restoration is never necessary, if even the most basic of precautions have been taken to back up data, but that is often not the cast and 80% of organizations facing ransomware do not have adequate backups.   The situation is common, though always avoidable, and at least half of ransom payments are motivated primarily by the need to release systems and have data returned, not to avoid it leaking.

In many cases, companies have felt it was more reliable or faster to pay ransom, and with gangs so skilled at instilling fear and manipulating American companies, it is not uncommon.  In some cases insurers have even insisted that victims pay ransom against their will.  HSB is one of the few that still does this, forcing victims to pay ransom even if they felt it was not necessary, simply because the insurance company felt it was cheaper or safer to do so. However, the practice has never gone away completely from most insurers. Because the claims staff frequently receive kickbacks, they will tell organizations they are best off paying, even when they are not.

Unfortunately, it is not cheaper or safer to do so, and this is especially true if you do have backed up data.  The restored data is 100% assured to be contaminated with malware and backdoors and the incident response will be far worse off. Paying ransom almost doubles the average cost of cleaning up an incident in the end.  It also dramatically increases the chances of future attacks.

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Cyber Insurance Applications Revealed

The moral failing of insurance that pays ransom regularly, makes no attempt not to, affirmatively disengages leaders and funds terrorism should be obvious, but many argue with me, stating that insurers are doing the best they can, have incomplete data, or that they are improving.

Unfortunately, they’re not. There have been a few small measures taken, mostly just in terms of wording changes. Not a dime has been invested in enforcement or compliance management.

To show how negligent these insurance companies have been, it’s important to take a look at the applications they have for cyber insurance. These applications represent all that these companies have, in terms of policy controls. It’s abundantly clear that no adult with any idea how any of this works wrote these. There is never any other enforcement. Even large clients do not receive independent assessments or audits. These “requirements” are not generally enforceable, do not create a call to action and, just plain won’t ever work. Money will continue to be lost until even the most minimal efforts to do otherwise are made.

Cyber insurance is considered a loss center (for some reason) and for this reason it gets zero investment and the underwriters who end up on this line are typically the lowest achievers. That’s truly the opposite of what is needed here.

These applications seem to be current, although some have not been updated in years. I do not think it is at all unreasonable to say that those who were responsible for writing the loss controls, for an insurance that paid extortion, to foreign hostile parties, should face some kind of criminal charges. This is not normal. This is not okay. It should not be normalized to have such clueless people, when professionals are avaliable.

Check out this PDF to get an idea of just how bad this situation is.

BREAKDOWN OF CYBER INSURANCE APPLICATIONS

HSB Total Cyber Insurance Application
AIG’S CYBER UNDERWRITING APPLICATION
Travelers CyberRisk Applications and Forms
Chubb Cyber And Privacy Insurance
Beazley Cyber Application
The Hartford CyberChoice Premier Application
FailSafe Cyber / Information Risk Supplement Application

How To Underwrite Cyber Insurance Properly

Because the artificial risk of cyber-attacks Is So controllable, Cyber Insurance can be a reliable cash cow, but it we must rethink what cyber risk is and what role cyber insurance plays. Doing so unlocks the door to billions of dollars in potential profits. Currently, nobody in the entire insurance sector knows how to do this and nobody does it properly.

The term for what we are living through is moral crisis.

Last year, the world lost hundreds of billions of dollars to cyber attacks and trillions were lost to the total economic impact of these attacks.  The biggest problem is ransomware, but business email compromise, leading to fund transfer fraud and other types of account interception and social engineering fraud are also costing the economy billions.  Every week, we hear about more police forces, hospitals, schools and critical institutions being attacked.  Ransom is frequently paid.  Lives have even been lost.  It’s no longer possible to rely on your doctor, lawyer, police force or fire department to be there for you and not leak your private information.

And then we have cyber insurance, which keeps paying ransom and racking up losses, insisting that “cyber is just inherently high loss” or “cyber incidents are like earthquakes: unpredictable and unstoppable.”  We see top ranking executives, even the likes of Warren Buffet saying that it is expected that cyber insurance will lose money.  It will because cyber risks are just big risks and we don’t know how to control them.  Also, we don’t have enough data, and perhaps in a few years we will be able to figure out how to price it.

As an expert in cyber security, ransomware especially, with an education in cyber security and over 20 years of experience, I cannot stress this enough: THIS IS INSANE!

Cybercrimes are just that: crimes.  Like all crimes, they are human created and can be stopped. Cyber security is not some oddball unfigured-out kind of thing.  It’s just bad guys breaking into our systems because we do not institute strong enough controls.  The idea that cyber criminals are so much smarter than our best engineers is absurd.  It’s the year 2024 and the US has the best technology in the world.  None of this needs to happen.  We could shut this down in a day, if there were proper experts involved.

There has been a massive misunderstanding of the nature of cyber risk by the insurance sector, and in doing so we have entrenches a monster which is sapping hundreds of billions of dollars out of the legitimate economy and is funding terrorism.  The history of cyber insurance is a comedy of errors.  There’s a reason no legitimate cyber risk experts should not have been consulted from day one, but there was a belief that cyber was simply a shiny object that could be monetized to appeal to the digital age. Insurers have been trying to sell cyber insurance without investing a dime in understanding it. They’ve simply broken something they don’t understand and now consider it a lost cause. This is absurd.

The truth is simple: If not for the fact that cyber insurance has come along and decided to encourage bad behavior, while funding crime, we would not have the ransomware problem we do. Our hospitals would be safe. Our schools would be safe. Our emergency services would not be targeted. The problem cannot currently be solved, because insurance companies stubbornly insist that they don’t want to, but are fine paying out ransoms.

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