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Ransomware Prevention

Ransomware prevention content provides actionable strategies for defending against ransomware attacks before they encrypt critical data. Articles cover backup protocols, endpoint detection, network segmentation, patch management, and incident response planning tailored to ransomware scenarios.

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Ransomware Examples

Ransomware Examples: What 2022 Attacks Teach Us

In May 2021, Colonial Pipeline paid $4.4 million in ransom after a single compromised password shut down fuel delivery across the Eastern United States. Months later, meat processor JBS paid $11 million to resume operations. If you searched for ransomware examples hoping to understand what these attacks actually look

Carl B. Johnson Mar 18, 2022 7 min read
Ransomware

How Ransomware Spreads: 6 Attack Vectors You Must Know

In February 2022, the FBI and CISA issued a joint advisory warning that ransomware incidents against 14 of 16 U.S. critical infrastructure sectors had increased dramatically. That advisory wasn't theoretical — it followed real attacks against water treatment facilities, hospitals, and food processors. If you're searching

Carl B. Johnson Mar 18, 2022 7 min read
Remote Work Cybersecurity Tips

Remote Work Cybersecurity Tips That Actually Work

In July 2021, a remote employee at a Florida IT management firm clicked a link that looked like a routine software update. Within hours, the REvil ransomware gang had compromised Kaseya's VSA platform and cascaded the attack to an estimated 1,500 downstream businesses. The initial foothold? A

Carl B. Johnson Jan 15, 2022 6 min read
Remote Desktop Security Risks

Remote Desktop Security Risks: What Attackers See

An Open Door You Didn't Know You Left Unlocked In August 2021, the FBI and CISA issued a joint advisory warning that threat actors exploiting Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) was the single most common initial access vector in ransomware attacks. Not phishing emails. Not zero-day exploits. RDP. The

Carl B. Johnson Jan 06, 2022 7 min read
Cybersecurity for Nonprofits

Cybersecurity for Nonprofits: A Practical Defense Guide

The Blackbaud Breach Should Have Been a Wake-Up Call In May 2020, a ransomware attack hit Blackbaud — one of the largest cloud computing providers serving nonprofits, hospitals, and universities. The breach exposed donor records, financial data, and Social Security numbers belonging to millions of people across hundreds of organizations. Blackbaud

Carl B. Johnson Jan 01, 2022 7 min read
Cloud Security Best Practices

Cloud Security Best Practices That Actually Stop Breaches

A Single Checkbox Left Unchecked Cost Capital One $80 Million In 2019, a former AWS employee exploited a misconfigured web application firewall to access over 100 million Capital One customer records. The breach led to an FTC investigation, an $80 million fine from the OCC, and a $190 million class-action

Carl B. Johnson Jan 01, 2022 7 min read
Stolen Credentials Dark Web

Stolen Credentials Dark Web: How Your Logins Get Sold

In April 2021, researchers discovered a database of 533 million Facebook user records — names, phone numbers, email addresses — freely circulating on a dark web forum. That same month, a compilation of 3.2 billion email-password pairs called "COMB" surfaced, aggregated from years of breaches. Stolen credentials on the

Carl B. Johnson Sep 23, 2021 7 min read
Medusa Ransomware

Medusa Ransomware Gang Phishing Campaigns Explained

A Ransomware Group That Starts With Your Inbox In June 2021, a mid-sized manufacturer discovered every file server in their environment encrypted. The ransom note was signed "Medusa." The entry point? A single phishing email that harvested an employee's VPN credentials. The Medusa ransomware gang phishing

Carl B. Johnson Aug 31, 2021 7 min read
Group Online Svindel

Group Online Svindel: How Organized Fraud Rings Work

A $12 Billion Problem You Can't Ignore In June 2021, Europol dismantled a massive fraud network spanning dozens of countries. The ring had siphoned millions from victims through coordinated romance scams, investment fraud, and business email compromise. This wasn't a lone hacker in a basement. It

Carl B. Johnson Jul 29, 2021 7 min read