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posted by martyb on Wednesday April 29 2020, @07:22AM   Printer-friendly
from the now-they-just-need-to-return-the-ransom-payments dept.

Shade (Troldesh) ransomware shuts down and releases decryption keys:

The operators of the Shade (Troldesh) ransomware have shut down over the weekend and, as a sign of goodwill, have released more than 750,000 decryption keys that past victims can now use to decrypt their files.

Security researchers from Kaspersky Lab have confirmed the validity of the leaked keys and are now working on creating a free decryption tool.

[...] The decryption keys released today will help all users who had files encrypted by the Shade ransomware. The keys are believed to account for all versions of the ransomware and all users who ever got infected.

[...] While security experts often recommend saving ransomware-encrypted files on an offline hard drive, most victims simply reinstall their computer from scratch, deleting the encrypted data. Those who saved their encrypted files can now recover data they once considered lost.

The Shade team posted on their GitHub repository:

We are the team which created a trojan-encryptor mostly known as Shade, Troldesh or Encoder.858. In fact, we stopped its distribution in the end of 2019. Now we made a decision to put the last point in this story and to publish all the decryption keys we have (over 750 thousands at all). We are also publishing our decryption soft; we also hope that, having the keys, antivirus companies will issue their own more user-friendly decryption tools. All other data related to our activity (including the source codes of the trojan) was irrevocably destroyed. We apologize to all the victims of the trojan and hope that the keys we published will help them to recover their data.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 29 2020, @08:50AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 29 2020, @08:50AM (#988131)

    They claim to have stopped a long time ago and are only doing the keys now. They probably stopped distributing it because the encryptor was used up and they moved on to other things or to lower their risk. Months later, the payouts have all stopped, so they can try to claim the moral high ground by releasing the keys. The other thing I could see happening is that their family got hit by something on their computers or they lost their job due to the lockdowns. This then made them think that maybe taking people's money like this when they are already poor or vulnerable hurts a little too much.

    Either way, two more ransomware families have probably taken its place by now.