Security Affairs
Security Affairs newsletter Round 584 by Pierluigi Paganini – INTERNATIONAL EDITION|U.S. Government Agency Paid $1M to Data Extortion Group Kairos|FBI: TeamPCP Compromised Dev Tools to Steal Cloud Credentials|Pegasus Used Against MEP Investigating Pegasus, Citizen Lab Finds|JADEPUFFER: First End-to-End AI-Driven Ransomware Operation|The Anatomy of a Shadow AI Supply-Chain Breach: Lessons from the 2026 Vercel Incident|Law enforcememt operation disrupted Malicious Residential Proxy Networks NetNut|Government and Healthcare Are the Weakest Links in Global Email Security|Europe Confirms Record €4.1B Penalty Against Google for Android Practices|U.S. CISA adds a Microsoft SharePoint Server flaw to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog|430,000 FortiGate Devices Exposed in FortiBleed Ransomware Link|Adobe fixed multiple maximum-severity flaws in ColdFusion and Campaign Classic|Security Affairs newsletter Round 584 by Pierluigi Paganini – INTERNATIONAL EDITION|U.S. Government Agency Paid $1M to Data Extortion Group Kairos|FBI: TeamPCP Compromised Dev Tools to Steal Cloud Credentials|Pegasus Used Against MEP Investigating Pegasus, Citizen Lab Finds|JADEPUFFER: First End-to-End AI-Driven Ransomware Operation|The Anatomy of a Shadow AI Supply-Chain Breach: Lessons from the 2026 Vercel Incident|Law enforcememt operation disrupted Malicious Residential Proxy Networks NetNut|Government and Healthcare Are the Weakest Links in Global Email Security|Europe Confirms Record €4.1B Penalty Against Google for Android Practices|U.S. CISA adds a Microsoft SharePoint Server flaw to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog|430,000 FortiGate Devices Exposed in FortiBleed Ransomware Link|Adobe fixed multiple maximum-severity flaws in ColdFusion and Campaign Classic|
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Ziggy ransomware admin announced it will refund victims who paid the ransom

Administrator of Ziggy ransomware recently announced the end of the operation, and now is promising that its victims will have back their money. In an unusual move, the administrator of Ziggy ransomware after the announcement of the end of the operation now is promising that they will give back their money. Ziggy ransomware ceased the […]

Reynolds ransomware uses BYOVD to disable security before encryption ransomware

Administrator of Ziggy ransomware recently announced the end of the operation, and now is promising that its victims will have back their money.

In an unusual move, the administrator of Ziggy ransomware after the announcement of the end of the operation now is promising that they will give back their money.

Ziggy ransomware ceased the operation in early February, when announced the decision “to publish all decryption keys.”

The news was confirmed by the researcher M. Shahpasandi to BleepingComputer. The mastermind behind the Ziggy Ransomware operation announced on Telegram the decision to shut down their activity.

“In an interview with BleepingComputer, the ransomware admin said they created the ransomware to generate money as they live in a “third-world country.”” reported BleepingComputer.

Ransomware operators are concerned about recent law enforcement activity that results in the operation against Netwalker ransomware.

Ziggy ransomware admin leaked a SQL file containing 922 decryption keys along with a decryptor. The ransomware admin also shared the source code for a different decryptor with BleepingComputer that includes offline decryption keys that could be used when the infected system is not connected to the Internet.

In order to decrypt the files, the victims have to provide three decryption keys that are included in the SQL file.

The ransomware gang released offline decryption tool to decrypt infected files while not being connected to the Internet or the command and control server was unreachable.

Now, as first reported by BleepingComputer, on March 19, the Ziggy ransomware administrator announced they will refund the victims.

Victims that paid the ransom should contact the group via email at ziggyransomware@secmail.pro to be refunded in about two weeks. Victims have to provide the payment receipt and the computer’s unique ID.

Experts believe that the Ziggy ransomware operators have monetized their efforts anyway due to the rise in the price of Bitcoin in the past months. Bitcoin price passed from $29,000 as December 31 up to $56,900 at the time of this writing allowing the gang to make a huge profit.

Recently another ransomware gang shut down its operations, it was the group behind the Fonix ransomware likely fearing the operation of law enforcement agencies.

In January, law enforcement authorities in the U.S. and Europe seized the dark web sites used by NetWalker ransomware operators. The authorities also charged a Canadian national involved in the NetWalker ransomware operations.

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Pierluigi Paganini

(SecurityAffairs – hacking, Ziggy ransomware)

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