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All news with #alphv tag

14 articles

Two Cybersecurity Workers Jailed for BlackCat Ransomware

🔒 Two American cybersecurity workers, Ryan Goldberg and Kevin Martin, were each sentenced to four years in prison for helping the BlackCat (ALPHV) ransomware gang carry out attacks in 2023, the US Department of Justice said. The pair — who pleaded guilty in December 2025 — worked with a former negotiator, Angelo Martino, and shared proceeds from ransoms, including a $1.2m Bitcoin payout. Prosecutors said they abused specialist cyber skills; the FBI tracked Goldberg across ten countries before his arrest.
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Two Cybersecurity Experts Get 4-Year Terms in BlackCat Case

🔒 The U.S. Department of Justice has sentenced two cybersecurity professionals to four years in prison for their roles in deploying ALPHV/BlackCat ransomware against multiple U.S. victims between April and December 2023. Ryan Goldberg and Kevin Martin pleaded guilty in December 2025 after conspiring with Angelo Martino to gain access to the ransomware in exchange for a share of ransoms. Authorities say one extortion yielded approximately $1.2 million in Bitcoin, which the defendants laundered, and that the men abused their security expertise while employed by Sygnia and DigitalMint.
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Former incident-response staff get 4-year terms for BlackCat

🔒 Two former employees of incident response firms Sygnia and DigitalMint were each sentenced to four years in prison after pleading guilty to conspiring to obstruct commerce by extortion for acting as affiliates of the BlackCat (ALPHV) ransomware group between May and November 2023. Prosecutors say they paid a 20% share for access to BlackCat's ransomware and extortion platform and breached multiple U.S. companies, including medical and manufacturing firms; one Tampa medical device company paid $1.27 million after a $10 million demand. DigitalMint said the individuals were immediately terminated and their conduct was condemned by the company.
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Former Ransomware Negotiator Pleads Guilty Over Collusion

🔒Angelo Martino, a 41-year-old former ransomware negotiator, has pleaded guilty to conspiring with the BlackCat (ALPHV) ransomware group after secretly supplying negotiation and insurance details from clients to the gang. While working for incident response firm Digital Mint, he passed policy limits and internal positions to maximize extortion profits and was paid for the information. He also admitted collaborating with associates to deploy ransomware between April and November 2023, and authorities have seized about $10m in assets; he faces up to 20 years and will be sentenced on July 9.
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Former Ransomware Negotiator Pleads Guilty in ALPHV Attacks

🔒 41-year-old Angelo Martino, a former negotiator at DigitalMint, pleaded guilty to participating in BlackCat (ALPHV) ransomware operations that targeted U.S. companies in 2023. Prosecutors say Martino shared confidential victim negotiation positions and insurance limits with the operators, enabling larger extortion demands, and worked with accomplices Ryan Goldberg and Kevin Martin. The trio operated as affiliates, paying administrators a 20% cut, and targeted at least five U.S. organizations, including firms and nonprofits that paid multimillion-dollar ransoms. DigitalMint condemned the conduct and said the employees were fired when the activity was discovered.
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Ransomware Actors Abuse ISPsystem VMs for Payload Delivery

🛡️ Ransomware groups are abusing virtual machines provisioned by ISPsystem to host and deliver malware at scale. Sophos researchers found identical Windows VM hostnames and system identifiers reused from default VMmanager templates, enabling operators such as LockBit, Qilin, Conti, BlackCat/ALPHV and others to hide malicious infrastructure among legitimate hosts. The tactic complicates attribution and slows takedown efforts, and Sophos tied most malicious VMs to a small cluster of poorly reputed hosting providers.
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Under Armour Investigates Alleged Leak of 72M Records

🔒 Under Armour is investigating claims that an unauthorized third party obtained customer data after the Everest ransomware group allegedly added the brand as a victim and claimed to have taken 343GB of information. Reports on 18 January 2026 said roughly 72 million email addresses and other personal details were posted on a hacking forum, and the incident was listed by Have I Been Pwned on 21 January. Compromised data is reported to include names, dates of birth, genders, geographic locations, purchase history and possibly phone numbers and some employee contact information. Under Armour says there is no evidence UA.com, payment processing systems or customer passwords were affected, and the company is working with external cybersecurity experts to investigate.
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US Cybersecurity Experts Plead Guilty in BlackCat Attacks

🔒 Two former employees of cybersecurity firms have pleaded guilty to conducting BlackCat (ALPHV) ransomware attacks against multiple U.S. companies in 2023, admitting to conspiracy to obstruct commerce by extortion. The defendants, Ryan Clifford Goldberg and Kevin Tyler Martin, formerly worked at Sygnia and DigitalMint respectively and face up to 20 years in prison with sentencing set for March 12, 2026. Prosecutors allege the pair, together with a third accomplice, breached networks across sectors including healthcare and manufacturing and received ransom proceeds after encrypting victims' servers.
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Top Ransomware Trends of 2025: Activity and Impact

🔍 Ransomware activity in 2025 remained high, with 306 groups and 7,902 victims listed on data leak sites, according to Ransomware.live. While coordinated takedowns and anti-cybercrime actions were quieter than in 2024, both emergent collectives (Scattered Spider, Lapsus$, ShinyHunters) and established syndicates continued to generate incidents. The most prolific actors — Qilin, Akira and Clop — claimed the largest shares of victims, and the United States accounted for nearly half of the reported targets.
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FinCEN: Ransomware Gangs Extorted $2.1B (2022–2024)

📊 A FinCEN analysis of 4,194 Bank Secrecy Act filings found organizations paid more than $2.1 billion in ransom between January 2022 and December 2024. Ransomware incidents peaked in 2023 before falling in 2024 after law enforcement actions disrupted ALPHV/BlackCat and LockBit. Most ransom payments were under $250,000 and roughly 97% were made in Bitcoin. Manufacturing, financial services, and healthcare were the most targeted industries.
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Cyber spies target German public administration, says BSI

🔒 The German Federal Office for Information Security (BSI) reports that cyber espionage is increasingly targeting public administration, with notable victims in defense, judiciary and public safety. The 1 July 2024–30 June 2025 report notes law-enforcement actions against ransomware providers LockBit and Alphv but warns many incidents go unreported. It highlights rising quishing and vishing attacks, insufficient basic protections—especially among SMEs and political organizations—and calls for stronger investment and reduced dependence on U.S. infrastructure.
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Cybersecurity Experts Charged Over BlackCat Ransomware

🔒 Three cybersecurity professionals have been indicted for allegedly operating an ALPHV/BlackCat ransomware affiliate network that attacked at least five U.S. companies between May and November 2023. Prosecutors named former Sygnia incident response manager Ryan Clifford Goldberg and negotiator Kevin Tyler Martin of DigitalMint, accusing them of exfiltrating data, encrypting systems, and demanding cryptocurrency extortion payments. An FBI affidavit describes encrypted dark‑web negotiations, multi‑hop transfers using privacy coins such as Monero, and meticulous spreadsheets that tracked ransoms, receipts, and wallet addresses. Charges include conspiracy to extort and intentional damage to protected computers, with potential forfeiture of crypto assets.
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U.S. Prosecutors Indict Three Over BlackCat Ransomware

🔒 Federal prosecutors have indicted three U.S. nationals accused of using BlackCat (ALPHV) ransomware to breach five companies between May and November 2023 and extort payments. The defendants—Ryan Clifford Goldberg, Kevin Tyler Martin, and an unnamed co‑conspirator—allegedly targeted firms in medical devices, pharmaceuticals, clinical care, engineering, and drone manufacturing. Two were employed by cybersecurity firms at the time; both employers say they cooperated with investigators.
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Ex-Incident Response Staff Indicted for BlackCat Attacks

🔒 Three former incident response employees from DigitalMint and Sygnia have been indicted for allegedly carrying out ALPHV/BlackCat ransomware attacks on five U.S. companies between May and November 2023. Prosecutors say the defendants accessed networks, exfiltrated data, deployed encryption malware, and demanded ransoms ranging from $300,000 to $10 million, with one victim paying $1.27 million. Two named defendants face federal extortion and computer-damage charges that carry up to 20 and 10 years in prison respectively.
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