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[return to "Checkout.com hacked, refuses ransom payment, donates to security labs"]
1. lexlam+65[view] [source] 2025-11-13 10:09:05
>>Strang+(OP)
The donation is more or less virtue signaling rather than actual insight.

The problem can not be helped by research research against cybercrime. Proper practices for protections are well established and known, they just need to be implemented.

The amount donated should've rather be invested into better protections / hiring a person responsible in the company.

(Context: The hack happened on a not properly decomissioned legacy system.)

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2. wallet+R8[view] [source] 2025-11-13 10:37:39
>>lexlam+65
It is virtue signaling, especially considering the fact that doing the hard to swallow thing of paying the ransom would probably be the best outcome from a customer perspective.

Yes there are negative externalities in funding ransomware operations, not paying is still much more likely to hurt your customers than paying.

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3. saberi+1D[view] [source] 2025-11-13 14:14:42
>>wallet+R8
Paying ransomware fines is never the smart move to do unless you happen to trust what cyber criminals tell you.

You send them the payment, they tell you they deleted the data, but they also sell the data to 10 other customers over the dark-web.

Why would you ever trust people who are inherently trustworthy and who are trying to screw you? While also encouraging further ransomware crimes in the future.

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4. wallet+EW[view] [source] 2025-11-13 15:50:28
>>saberi+1D
It’s a sliding scale.

If you don’t pay, the odds they will publish your data are closer to 100%. If you do pay, the odds have historically been much closer to 0% than 100%

You aren’t paying to be sure, but to improve your chances.

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