Bitcoin Intensifies Pain for Some as Ransom Demands Skyrocket
Once a niche market, ransom insurance is booming as hackers demand bitcoins in ransomware attacks.
December 21, 2017

(Bloomberg) --Hey, want those photos and files back? It may cost more than it used to.
Thank bitcoin.
Chubb Ltd., best known for catering to wealthy families and corporations, is among at least three insurers facing a jump in costs tied to claims from ransomware attacks. The firms attribute much of that to the surging price of bitcoin, the currency of choice for online extortionists. And that’s bad news for everyone.
There’s been “a massive escalation” in both the number of attempts and the size of demands as criminals scramble for the hot cryptocurrency, said Michael Tanenbaum, an executive vice president at Zurich-based Chubb. “The rise in price of bitcoin correlates,” he said in an interview, declining to specify total costs. Around midyear, top payouts in corporate ransomware attacks began to exceed $1 million, dwarfing the previous maximum of about $17,000, he said.
Insurers like Chubb are a good place to look for information on costs from ransomware -- a type of malicious software that blocks access to computer files until victims pay a toll. Globally, security firms say incidents have exploded, ranging from precision hacks to this year’s mass assaults, like WannaCry. Insurers have a unique view of what actually gets paid, especially in the most expensive cases, because they may shoulder the burden.
Typically, they enlist third-party specialists, such as Kivu Consulting and Navigant Consulting, to facilitate cryptocurrency payments and investigate perpetrators. Those firms say business is booming.
This year’s frenzy for bitcoin has made hackers bolder, demanding larger payouts, said Winston Krone, a global managing director who oversees Kivu’s ransomware services. Demands of $250,000 to $500,000 were nonexistent six months ago, and now they’re a weekly occurrence, he said.