Significant Decline in Ransomware Revenue
Ransomware profits experienced a dramatic 40% drop in 2022, with attackers extorting at least $456.8 million from victims. This figure marks a steep decline from the $765.6 million collected in 2021, according to a report from blockchain analysis firm Chainalysis. The decrease in revenue is not attributed to a reduction in attack frequency. On the contrary, data indicates that the number of unique ransomware strains active in the market has grown substantially. The primary driver behind this financial downturn for cybercriminals is a fundamental shift in victim behavior: a growing refusal to pay ransom demands.
The Shift in Victim Response
Data from ransomware negotiation firm Coveware confirms this trend, showing that the percentage of victims paying ransoms fell from 85% in the first quarter of 2019 to just 41% in the final quarter of 2022. This organizational reluctance to pay is influenced by multiple factors. Bill Siegel, CEO of Coveware, noted that the stigma associated with paying a ransom has increased, making companies more hesitant to capitulate to attackers’ demands. Organizations are improving their cyber defenses with better backups and incident response plans, reducing the operational damage caused by an attack and making recovery possible without paying the criminals.
Government actions have also played a crucial role. The U.S. government has officially discouraged ransom payments and has imposed sanctions on certain ransomware-as-a-service operations, such as Conti. These sanctions make it illegal for victims to transfer funds to designated threat groups. Furthermore, successful law enforcement actions, including the FBI’s high-profile takedown of the Hive ransomware group’s infrastructure, have disrupted attacker operations and demonstrated a coordinated international response to the cybercrime threat. While profits have fallen, the ransomware threat remains prevalent.