UK to ban public sector from making ransomware payments

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The UK is moving forward with a ban on its public sector and operators of critical national infrastructure paying ransomware demands.

The proposals released on Tuesday as a result of a public consultation call for a ban on ransomware payments covering all public sector bodies and critical national infrastructure such as energy, health service and local councils — expanding an existing ban on government departments.

Other parts of the proposal include a prevention regime to require victims and businesses not covered by the ban to report when they intend to pay a ransom. 

A mandatory threshold-based reporting system that requires victims to pen a report with key details for the government within 72 hours of the attack, and a more in-depth analysis within 28 days, is also on the table. 

UK security minister Dan Jarvis said the Home Office is “determined to smash the cyber criminal business model and protect the services we all rely on,” and work “in partnership with industry to advance these measures.” 

Source: Dan Jarvis 

Ransomware is malicious software that encrypts a computer or network to block access to it until a sum is paid, which is typically requested in cryptocurrency.

Ransomware declined last year, with Chainalysis reporting in February that ransomware attacks decreased by 35% last year compared to 2023.

In June, CertiK said the bulk of crypto losses this year have been from wallet compromises and phishing attacks. 

Most agree with ban, split on penalties

The UK Home Office consulted on the proposals from Jan. 14 to April 8 and received 273 responses, 57% identified as organizations, 39% individuals and 4% are classed as other.