Extortion-Only Attacks Increase, With Data Theft Dominating Ransomware Claims
Extortion-only attacks are increasing as data theft drives most ransomware claims, with many organizations unable to stop stolen data from being exposed
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Background for this topic.
Exposure is the condition in which a system, service, credential, vulnerability, or sensitive information is accessible or discoverable by people or systems that should not reach it. In threat modeling, it describes an attack surface or loss of control—not proof that an attacker has succeeded. Examples include an internet-facing administration interface, cloud storage with unintended permissions, a secret committed to source code, or personal data sent to an unintended recipient. Its significance depends on what is exposed, who can reach it, and which protections remain.
The primary defense is exposure reduction: maintain an accurate asset inventory, remove unnecessary public access, enforce least-privilege permissions and strong authentication, patch externally reachable software, and revoke leaked credentials or secrets. Encryption can limit the value of exposed data, but does not correct an exposed access path. Continuous scanning and log review help identify changes and support rapid containment when exposure is discovered.
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Extortion-only attacks are increasing as data theft drives most ransomware claims, with many organizations unable to stop stolen data from being exposed
A 5-year study on the Ransomware Economy found that 30,515 exposed databases were hit by ransom attacks, causing massive damage despite victims never paying. Database extortion doesn’t look like the ransomware stories that usually grab headlines. There’s no slick branding, no leak-site countdown, no gang posting memes on Telegram. In most cases, there’s just a […]