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ransoming

Ransoming is the act of demanding payment, usually called a ransom, in exchange for the release of a person or property, or the restoration of access to information or services. The term covers both traditional crimes such as kidnapping and modern forms such as cyber extortion. The practice is generally illegal in many jurisdictions and is prosecuted as extortion or kidnapping.

Historically, ransom demands have been issued by kidnappers seeking release of hostages, captives, or seized property,

Technological developments have given rise to cyber ransoming, where attackers encrypt data and demand payment for

Legal and policy responses to ransoming vary by jurisdiction. Many countries prohibit or discourage ransom payments,

sometimes
with
deadlines
and
threats
of
harm.
Ransomware
and
other
types
of
extortion
have
expanded
the
concept
to
include
digital
assets,
where
criminals
demand
payment
to
unlock
encrypted
data
or
prevent
the
public
disclosure
of
stolen
information.
Payments
are
often
sought
in
cash
or
cryptocurrency.
a
decryption
key,
or
exfiltrate
data
and
threaten
disclosure.
This
double-extortion
tactic
heightens
pressure
on
victims.
Ransom
demands
typically
specify
payment
methods,
deadlines,
and
contact
channels,
and
attackers
may
provide
a
way
to
verify
decryption
after
payment.
and
some
sanctions
regimes
restrict
payments
to
designated
individuals
or
groups.
Law
enforcement
agencies
and
cybersecurity
professionals
generally
advise
against
paying,
arguing
that
payments
encourage
criminal
activity
and
do
not
guarantee
release.
Prevention
relies
on
risk
assessment,
backups,
access
controls,
and
incident
response
planning.