Script Kiddies Killing The Margins In Online Extortion
from the competitive-scammers dept
Over the past few years, we've been seeing more and more stories about online extortion scams. Some involve the threat of taking down websites with a denial of service attack if no payment is made, but increasingly common is the trojan-as-extortion trick. The scammer somehow tricks the victim into installing a trojan horse that then threatens to delete or lockup files... unless a payment is made. However, in the past, that payment has been on the order of $50 or $100 or so. However, it appears that as more script kiddies get access to the tools to do similar things, the price is going down. These days, it looks like the going price may be only $10.99 to keep your files safe. Who knew that extortion prices were subject to market pressures brought on by an increase in supply? Yes, this is a joke, but the next time you get one of these trojans demanding $50, be sure to tell the scammer that it's way over the market price.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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HAHAHAHAHA!!
*more maniacal laughing*
That's awesome!
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Re: HAHAHAHAHA!!
HAHAHAHAHAHAHA
Definitely one of the funnest and most perfect forms of poetic justice I've heard in quite awhile.
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Doesn't make sense
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Re: Doesn't make sense
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Re: Re: Doesn't make sense
Who knew that extortion prices were subject to market pressures brought on by an increase in supply? Yes, this is a joke
See that last bit? "Yes, this is a joke"
so Laugh and just have fun with the supply and demand note.
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Re: Re: Re: Doesn't make sense
What's really scary was my original draft of this post didn't include the "yes, this is a joke" line... but I added it, figuring that some people would completely miss the fact that it was a joke.
What I didn't expect was that even after I explicitly said it was a joke, people still wouldn't realize it was a joke.
:)
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Re: Doesn't make sense
It's an interesting economic question. On a purely rational basis, the users should pay up if it costs them less per year than a subscription to a service that blocks the trojans. I'm willing to bet, though, that a behavioral study would find people are willing to pay much more as long as each incident is really cheap.
The more things change, the more they stay the same.
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Re: Doesn't make sense
Sure they do. The more trojans are out there the greater the incentive to back up more often. The more often you back up, the less you are willing to pay.
Also, the more trojans are out there, the more likely it is that their authors share information about which targets pay up, increasing the cost to you of a generous payment.
That said, I would expect the major market effect to be on factors other than price--better protected computers in general and fewer vulnerable computers per spammer. That's analogous to the way in which the returns from burglary fall as the number of burglars increases.
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hand over the dough
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script KIDDIES!
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Re: script KIDDIES!
But really, what type of payments are used? Can these not be traced? This is illegal, right? Can you not call the authorities (not sure whose jurisdiction) and let them figure it out?
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Fun Joke
Sometimes I'm so deviuos I scare myself.
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Re: Fun Joke
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Re: Re: Fun Joke
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Satruation
Consumers dont go out window shopping for the best deal on a virus that will extort them....
Normal supply and demand economics don't work on criminal racketeering. Market pressure is a foot on your neck, not a fluxuating valuation.
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Read the Sarcasm
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How Saturation DOES affect racketeering...
So Saturation in this scenario does play part of the scheme.
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Joke
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the market price for your data is lower than you t
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Screw All That
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HA
;)
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This is too stupid!
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Blahhhhh
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Now have reached Craigslist
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Craigslist extortion
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