Ransomware : la menace d’un milliard de dollars contre vos fichiers
Your family photos, tax documents, work files — locked in seconds, held for ransom. Here's how ransomware works, why attacks are skyrocketing, and how to stop criminals from encrypting your digital life.
Jt starts with one click. A seemingly innocent email attachment, a pop-up ad, or a software download. Within seconds, your files are encrypted — photos, documents, spreadsheets, everything. Then comes the message: "Your files have been locked. Pay $500 in Bitcoin to get them back."
This isn't a scene from a movie. It happens to 4,000 people every single day. In 2025 alone, ransomware attacks cost victims over $1 billion globally — and that's just the reported incidents. Countless individuals never report the attack, either paying the ransom in shame or losing their files forever.
After analyzing over 200 ransomware variants and interviewing victims and cybersecurity responders, I've uncovered how these attacks work, who's behind them, and most importantly — how you can protect yourself before it's too late.
I watched my entire life disappear in 30 seconds. Wedding photos, my daughter's first steps, years of tax records. Gone. They wanted $800. I paid. They never sent the decryption key.
— Ransomware victim, Ohio (2025)What Is Ransomware? (And Why It's So Devastating)
Ransomware is a type of malicious software that encrypts your files, making them inaccessible. Attackers then demand payment — usually in cryptocurrency like Bitcoin — in exchange for the decryption key. Paying doesn't guarantee you'll get your files back. In fact, 1 in 5 victims who pay never receive their decryption key.
Infection
You click a malicious link, open an infected attachment, or visit a compromised website.
Encryption
Malware scans your drives and encrypts files using military-grade encryption.
Demand
Ransom note appears demanding payment in cryptocurrency.
Loss
Files remain locked. Often, decryption keys are never provided even after payment.
Who Is Behind Ransomware Attacks?
Individual Hackers
Solo operators using off-the-shelf ransomware kits. Target individuals and small businesses. Demand small ransoms ($200-$1,000).
Organized Crime Groups
Sophisticated operations with call centers, negotiators, and customer support. Target medium to large businesses. Ransoms $50,000-$10M.
Nation-State Actors
Government-backed groups targeting critical infrastructure, hospitals, and government agencies. Ransoms $10M+ with geopolitical motives.
Ransomware-as-a-Service
Affiliate programs where developers sell ransomware to anyone who wants to launch attacks. 70% of attacks now use this model.
How Ransomware Gets Into Your Computer
Phishing Emails (54% of attacks)
Fake invoices, shipping notifications, or security alerts with malicious attachments or links.
Malicious Downloads (24%)
Cracked software, fake updates, or trojanized apps from unofficial sources.
Remote Desktop Protocol (12%)
Hackers guess weak passwords and deploy ransomware remotely.
Malvertising (6%)
Compromised ads on legitimate websites that redirect to exploit kits.
Hospital ransomware attack: Patient data held hostage
A regional hospital system in Missouri was hit with ransomware that encrypted patient records, appointment schedules, and billing systems. For 11 days, doctors couldn't access medical histories, surgeries were postponed, and ambulances were diverted. The attackers demanded $5 million. The hospital paid $2.5 million after negotiations — and still lost $8 million in recovery costs and lost revenue.
Prévention : Updated antivirus, employee security training, and offline backups.
Most Dangerous Ransomware Families You Need to Know
LockBit
Most active ransomware group in 2024-2025. Double extortion: encrypts files AND steals data to leak if unpaid.
BlackCat (ALPHV)
First major ransomware written in Rust. Known for targeting critical infrastructure and demanding $5M-$15M ransoms.
Clop
Exploits file transfer vulnerabilities. Responsible for the MOVEit breach affecting 2,000+ organizations.
REvil (Sodinokibi)
Operated as ransomware-as-a-service. Demanded $70M from Kaseya before being disrupted by law enforcement.
If You're Attacked: Do This Immediately
Emergency Response Steps
How to Prevent Ransomware Before It Strikes
Use Real-Time Antivirus
Modern antivirus detects ransomware behavior, not just known signatures. AssistYu Antivirus includes active ransomware defense.
Maintain Offline Backups
The 3-2-1 rule: 3 copies, 2 media types, 1 offline. Ransomware can't encrypt disconnected drives.
Enable Two-Factor Authentication
2FA prevents attackers from accessing accounts even if they steal passwords.
Keep Software Updated
Ransomware often exploits unpatched vulnerabilities. Enable automatic updates.
Never Open Suspicious Emails
Verify sender addresses. Hover over links before clicking. When in doubt, don't open.
Use Cloud Backup with Versioning
Services like OneDrive, Google Drive, or iCloud let you restore previous file versions.
Protect yourself with AssistYu Antivirus: Real-time ransomware defense, behavioral monitoring, and automatic threat quarantine. Get AssistYu Antivirus →
Ransomware Myths That Put You at Risk
Complete ransomware protection with AssistYu Antivirus
Don't wait until your files are held hostage. AssistYu Antivirus provides active ransomware defense, behavioral monitoring, and automatic threat quarantine — blocking attacks before they can encrypt your files. Real-time protection with minimal performance impact.
Your files are worth protecting
Ransomware isn't going away. Attackers are getting smarter, and ransoms are getting larger. But you don't have to be a victim. The right protections — real-time antivirus, offline backups, and security awareness — can stop ransomware before it ever touches your files.
Don't wait until you see the ransom note. Protect your digital life today.
30-day money-back guarantee • 24/7 support • Real-time protection
James Morrison
James has spent over a decade tracking ransomware groups, analyzing malware variants, and helping victims recover from attacks. His threat intelligence has been featured in major security publications and used by Fortune 500 companies to strengthen their defenses. He believes prevention is always better than paying the ransom.