The CEO Ransom: How Hackers Target High-Net-Worth Individuals, Not Just Companies.

2,946 words, 16 minutes read time.

The Shift from Corporate Databases to Individual Fortunes: Why the Executive is the New Perimeter

The landscape of modern cyber warfare has shifted its primary focus from the broad, indiscriminate harvesting of corporate data to the surgical, high-stakes targeting of individuals who command significant financial and social capital. While large-scale ransomware attacks against multinational corporations continue to dominate the headlines, a more insidious and sophisticated trend is emerging: the “CEO Ransom.” This evolution in cyber-criminal strategy recognizes that a single high-net-worth individual (HNWI) often possesses a digital attack surface that is significantly less defended than a Fortune 500 network, yet offers a comparable, if not more accessible, financial payout. Analyzing the trajectory of recent breaches reveals that adversaries are no longer content with the “spray and pray” methodology of traditional phishing; instead, they are engaging in what is known as “Big Game Hunting,” where the target is not just a database, but the personal assets, reputation, and decision-making power of an elite executive.

This transition toward the individual as the primary attack vector is driven by the realization that personal digital ecosystems are frequently the “soft underbelly” of corporate security. An executive may operate within a multi-million dollar cybersecurity framework at the office, but their home network, personal mobile devices, and family communications often lack even a fraction of that oversight. Consequently, threat actors are leveraging public data, social engineering, and sophisticated technical exploits to bridge the gap between an individual’s private life and their professional responsibilities. By compromising a personal account or an unsecured home IoT device, an attacker gains a foothold that can lead to direct financial theft, identity takeover, or the leverage required for high-stakes extortion. This methodology bypasses traditional perimeter defenses entirely, moving the frontline of cybersecurity from the server room to the living room.

The Anatomy of a High-Net-Worth Target: Digital Footprints and Lifestyle Vulnerabilities

Mapping the attack surface of a high-net-worth individual requires an understanding of how lifestyle transparency creates digital vulnerability. In an era of constant connectivity, the “life-logging” habits of the elite—whether through public appearances, social media updates, or high-profile philanthropic endeavors—provide a wealth of open-source intelligence (OSINT) for potential adversaries. An attacker can meticulously reconstruct an individual’s daily routine, travel schedule, and professional associations simply by aggregating fragmented data points from public records and social platforms. This data is then utilized to craft highly personalized and convincing social engineering campaigns that are far more effective than generic lures. For example, knowing the specific charitable foundation an executive supports or the boutique investment firm they frequent allows an attacker to masquerade as a trusted entity with terrifying precision.

Furthermore, the vulnerability of family offices and private digital infrastructure presents a unique challenge that traditional IT departments are often ill-equipped to handle. Family offices, which manage the private wealth and personal affairs of HNWIs, frequently operate with lean staffs that may prioritize convenience and “white-glove” service over rigorous security protocols. This creates an environment where sensitive financial documents, travel itineraries, and private communications are stored on systems that lack enterprise-grade monitoring or incident response capabilities. Analyzing the digital footprint of a modern executive reveals an interconnected web of personal and professional nodes, including high-end smart home systems, private jet management portals, and luxury concierge services, all of which represent potential entry points. When these systems are linked via a single, inadequately secured personal email address or a shared password, the entire architecture becomes a house of cards waiting for a single, targeted exploit to bring it down.

Why Legacy Security Models Fail the Modern Executive: The “Castle and Moat” Fallacy

The fundamental failure in modern executive protection lies in the continued reliance on the “Castle and Moat” security philosophy, a model that assumes a clear boundary between a “trusted” internal network and an “untrusted” external world. For the high-net-worth individual, this boundary has not only blurred but has effectively ceased to exist. An executive’s life is characterized by high mobility, involving constant transitions between corporate headquarters, private residences, international hotels, and transit hubs. Each of these environments introduces a different set of variables and potential compromises that a static, office-based firewall cannot address. When an individual relies on the perceived security of a luxury hotel’s Wi-Fi or the convenience of a shared family iPad, they are inadvertently bypassing the millions of dollars invested in corporate-grade endpoint detection and response (EDR) systems. The legacy model fails because it is designed to protect a location, whereas the modern threat landscape is designed to target the person, regardless of their coordinates.

Analyzing the social engineering tactics used in the 2020 Twitter high-profile account breach serves as a stark case study in this systemic failure. In that instance, attackers did not breach a hardened server through a zero-day exploit; instead, they targeted the human element—employees with administrative access—using sophisticated vishing (voice phishing) techniques. For a high-net-worth individual, the “administrative access” to their life is often held by a small circle of assistants, household staff, or family office personnel. These individuals often lack formal security training, making them the ideal bypass for an executive’s personal security. If a threat actor can convince a personal assistant to “verify” a password or click a “shipping notification” link, the most expensive residential security system in the world becomes irrelevant. This highlights the reality that legacy security is too rigid for the fluid nature of an executive’s lifestyle, failing to account for the decentralized and highly social nature of their digital interactions.

Furthermore, the “Castle and Moat” fallacy ignores the proliferation of interconnected devices that form the modern executive’s “Personal Area Network” (PAN). From high-end wearables and biometric health trackers to smart home automation systems that control everything from climate to physical entry points, the number of potential backdoors is staggering. Most of these consumer-grade devices prioritize user experience and aesthetic over cryptographic integrity. They frequently ship with hardcoded credentials, lack a standardized patching mechanism, and communicate over unencrypted protocols. A compromise of a single smart thermostat in a private home can provide the lateral movement necessary for an attacker to reach a laptop used for sensitive business negotiations. In this context, the “moat” is dry, and the “castle” walls are porous, leaving the individual at the center of a fragmented and highly vulnerable ecosystem that requires a complete shift toward a Zero Trust architecture for personal life.

The Weaponization of Information: From Spear-Phishing to Deepfake Extortion

The weaponization of information has evolved from crude, mass-market email scams into a highly refined discipline of digital psychological warfare. For the high-net-worth individual, the threat is no longer a generic “Nigerian Prince” lure but a surgically crafted spear-phishing campaign that leverages specific, verified details about their business dealings, philanthropic interests, or social circle. Attackers engage in weeks or months of “pre-texting,” where they monitor an executive’s public statements and corporate filings to build a narrative so compelling that the target’s natural skepticism is neutralized. This is particularly evident in the rise of Business Email Compromise (BEC) at the personal level. In these scenarios, an attacker might intercept a legitimate conversation between an executive and their wealth manager, eventually injecting a fraudulent wire transfer request that mirrors the tone, formatting, and timing of previous, authentic interactions. Because the request fits the established pattern of the executive’s life, it often bypasses the standard scrutiny applied to corporate transactions.

Beyond traditional text-based deception, we are entering the era of the “Deepfake Extortion” economy, where generative AI is used to create hyper-realistic voice and video clones of trusted individuals. This represents a paradigm shift in the threat landscape. Imagine a scenario where a family office comptroller receives a video call from the CEO, appearing in their usual office setting, requesting an urgent, off-book transfer for a confidential acquisition. The voice is perfect, the mannerisms are identical, and the urgency is palpable. This is not a hypothetical threat; the technology to execute such an attack is currently available and increasingly accessible. For a high-net-worth individual, whose voice and likeness are often widely available in public interviews and media appearances, the data required to train these AI models is plentiful. The ability to fabricate “proof of life” or “proof of authorization” undermines the foundational trust of all digital communication, turning an executive’s own identity into a weapon used against their interests.

The psychological impact of this information weaponization cannot be overstated, as it often extends into the realm of “doxing” and the threat of reputational destruction. Extortionists no longer just lock up files; they exfiltrate sensitive personal data—private photos, legal documents, or confidential health records—and threaten to leak them unless a ransom is paid. For an individual whose career and social standing are built on a specific public image, the threat of a data leak is often more motivating than the threat of data loss. This “double extortion” tactic is particularly effective against high-profile targets because it creates a sense of powerlessness and urgency. The attacker is not just hitting the bank account; they are hitting the target’s legacy. As AI tools continue to lower the barrier for creating convincing fake evidence, the potential for “synthetic extortion”—where the leaked information is entirely fabricated but indistinguishable from the truth—becomes a terrifyingly viable tool for professional cyber-criminals.

Continuing with the deep-dive into the technical and structural vulnerabilities that define the high-net-worth threat landscape.

Technical Root Causes: The Interconnectedness of Personal and Professional Tech

The crisis of executive cybersecurity is rooted in the “collision of worlds,” where the boundary between enterprise-grade security and consumer-grade convenience dissolves. Most high-net-worth individuals operate under a “Shadow IT” umbrella in their personal lives, utilizing applications and hardware that have never been audited by a security professional. This manifests most dangerously in the use of legacy personal email accounts—often established decades ago—as the primary recovery mechanism for high-value financial and professional portals. Because these personal accounts frequently lack the rigorous conditional access policies found in a corporate environment, they become the “master key” for an attacker. Once an adversary gains access to a Gmail or iCloud account, they can systematically reset passwords across the target’s entire digital life, bypassing multi-factor authentication (MFA) by intercepting recovery codes or leveraging the “trusted device” status of a compromised smartphone.

Furthermore, the proliferation of “smart” luxury is a primary technical driver of risk. Modern estates are managed by Integrated Building Management Systems (IBMS) that control everything from biometric wine cellars to surveillance arrays. These systems are often installed by third-party contractors who prioritize functionality over security, frequently leaving remote access ports (such as RDP or VNC) open to the public internet with default or weak credentials. For a sophisticated threat actor, these systems are not just targets; they are pivot points. A vulnerability in a smart lighting controller can allow an attacker to move laterally into the home office network, where they can deploy keyloggers or screen-capture malware on a device used for sensitive board-level communications. This interconnectedness creates a “cascading failure” scenario, where a single weak link in a non-critical system can compromise the integrity of the individual’s most sensitive professional and financial assets.

Credential stuffing and the persistent habit of password reuse remain the most exploited “low-tech” vulnerabilities in the high-net-worth bracket. Despite the availability of password managers, many individuals rely on a handful of complex but reused variations for their most important logins. When a third-party service—such as a niche luxury travel site or a private members’ club database—is breached, those credentials are immediately tested against major banks, email providers, and social media platforms. For an executive, the cost of a credential leak is amplified by the speed at which an attacker can move. In the time it takes for a breach notification to be sent, an automated script can have already drained a brokerage account or locked an executive out of their primary communication channels. This technical negligence is often a byproduct of “security friction,” where the more successful an individual becomes, the less they are willing to tolerate the procedural hurdles required to stay secure, ultimately trading long-term safety for short-term convenience.

Actionable Fixes: Building a Personal Security Operations Center (PSOC)

Defending a high-net-worth individual requires moving beyond “best practices” and toward the implementation of a Personal Security Operations Center (PSOC) framework. The first and most non-negotiable step in this process is the elimination of “soft” MFA. Standard SMS-based or push-notification authentication is no longer sufficient for high-value targets, as it is susceptible to SIM swapping and MFA fatigue attacks. A robust PSOC mandate requires the transition to hardware-based security keys, such as Yubico or Google Titan, for all critical accounts. By requiring a physical token that must be present to authorize a login, the individual effectively nullifies the threat of remote credential theft. This physical “handshake” introduces a layer of friction that is proportional to the value of the assets being protected, ensuring that even if an attacker possesses a password, they lack the physical “key” to the vault.

In addition to hardware-based identity management, the adoption of specialized, encrypted communication channels is vital for maintaining the confidentiality of family and financial data. Relying on standard cellular calls or unencrypted messaging apps for discussing sensitive maneuvers is a significant operational security (OPSEC) failure. A PSOC approach utilizes end-to-end encrypted (E2EE) platforms like Signal or Threema, coupled with the “disappearing messages” feature to ensure that no permanent digital trail exists for an attacker to harvest. Furthermore, the use of a dedicated, “hardened” device for financial transactions—one that is never used for general web browsing or social media—greatly reduces the risk of malware infection. This “air-gapping” strategy, while demanding, ensures that the individual’s most sensitive actions are performed in a clean-room environment, isolated from the noise and danger of the broader internet.

Finally, the technical architecture of the private residence must be overhauled to reflect an enterprise-security mindset. This involves the segmentation of home networks using VLANs (Virtual Local Area Networks) to ensure that untrusted IoT devices—like smart TVs and kitchen appliances—are physically and logically isolated from the “secure” network used for work and banking. Coupled with the use of a high-performance, open-source firewall like pfSense or a managed security appliance, the individual gains granular visibility into the traffic entering and leaving their home. This allows for the implementation of “geofencing,” where traffic from high-risk jurisdictions can be blocked at the network level, and the setup of automated alerts for any unusual data exfiltration patterns. By treating the home as a micro-enterprise, the high-net-worth individual transforms their private life from a soft target into a hardened fortress, making the “CEO Ransom” a prohibitively difficult and expensive operation for any adversary to pursue.

Conclusion: Resilience as a Competitive Advantage

The “CEO Ransom” is more than a technical threat; it is a strategic challenge that requires a fundamental shift in how high-net-worth individuals perceive their digital existence. In an era where personal data is weaponized and individual reputations are traded as commodities on the dark web, the traditional boundary between “personal” and “professional” has been permanently erased. For the modern executive, cybersecurity is no longer a department to be delegated to a remote IT team; it is a core component of personal leadership and risk management. Resilience in this landscape is not defined by the absence of attacks—as the targeting of high-value individuals is now an inevitability—but by the robustness of the systems put in place to neutralize those attacks before they can escalate into a crisis. By treating digital hygiene with the same rigor as financial auditing or physical security, an individual transforms their digital footprint from a liability into a hardened asset.

Ultimately, the goal of a Personal Security Operations Center (PSOC) and the adoption of an uncompromising defensive posture is to move the individual out of the “Big Game Hunting” sights of global adversaries. Privacy, in its truest sense, has become the ultimate luxury—and the ultimate defense. When an executive can operate with the confidence that their communications are encrypted, their identities are anchored by hardware, and their home networks are segmented and monitored, they gain a competitive advantage. They are free to focus on their professional mandates without the looming shadow of digital extortion or financial sabotage. The “CEO Ransom” only succeeds when the target is unprepared, unmonitored, and over-leveraged on convenience. By reclaiming control over the digital perimeter, the high-net-worth individual ensures that their legacy remains their own, protected by a fortress of their own making.

Call to Action

If this breakdown helped you think a little clearer about the threats out there, don’t just click away. Subscribe for more no-nonsense security insights, drop a comment with your thoughts or questions, or reach out if there’s a topic you want me to tackle next. Stay sharp out there.

D. Bryan King

Sources

CISA: Targeted Attacks Against High-Profile Individuals
FBI IC3: 2023 Business Email Compromise Report
Verizon 2024 Data Breach Investigations Report (DBIR)
NIST Special Publication 800-63: Digital Identity Guidelines
INTERPOL: The Rise of Global Financial Cybercrime
Krebs on Security: Investigating Individual Extortion Trends
Mandiant: Advanced Persistent Threats (APT) Targeting Executives
CrowdStrike: Defining ‘Big Game Hunting’ in Modern Ransomware
MITRE: Deepfakes as a New Frontier for Cyber Attacks
Proofpoint: State of the Phish 2024 Executive Analysis
PwC Global Digital Trust Insights: The Individual Risk Factor
Black Hat USA 2023: Social Engineering High-Value Targets

Disclaimer:

The views and opinions expressed in this post are solely those of the author. The information provided is based on personal research, experience, and understanding of the subject matter at the time of writing. Readers should consult relevant experts or authorities for specific guidance related to their unique situations.

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Pro-Iranian Nasir Security is Targeting The Energy Sector in the Middle East

A new cybercriminal group, Nasir Security, believed to be associated with Iran, is targeting energy organizations in the Middle East. They focus on attacking supply chain vendors involved in engineering, safety, and construction. The group emerged in October 2025 and has claimed attacks on various energy sector companies, including Dubai Petroleum, CC Energy Development, and Al-Safi Oil Company. However, their claims are likely exaggerated, and the actual breaches appear to be of third-party contractors. The group's tactics include business email compromise, spear phishing, and exploiting public-facing applications. Their activities are seen as part of a broader Iranian strategy to conduct cyberattacks and spread misinformation during ongoing geopolitical conflicts.

Pulse ID: 69c18827a9d99fd60dad6b8c
Pulse Link: https://otx.alienvault.com/pulse/69c18827a9d99fd60dad6b8c
Pulse Author: AlienVault
Created: 2026-03-23 18:36:23

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#CyberAttack #CyberAttacks #CyberSecurity #Email #ICS #InfoSec #Iran #MiddleEast #OTX #OpenThreatExchange #Phishing #RAT #SpearPhishing #SupplyChain #bot #AlienVault

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Libyan Oil Refinery Among Targets in Long-running Likely Espionage Campaign

A series of attacks targeting Libyan organizations, including an oil refinery, a telecoms organization, and a state institution, occurred between November 2025 and February 2026. The campaign utilized the AsyncRAT backdoor, delivered through spear-phishing emails with Libya-themed lure documents. The attackers exploited current events, such as the assassination of Saif al-Gaddafi, to gain access to networks. The modular nature of AsyncRAT and the targeted organizations suggest possible state sponsorship. The campaign's focus on Libya and its oil industry is notable, given the country's increased oil production and global energy supply concerns amidst Middle East conflicts.

Pulse ID: 69bdb8e4c95a097d1f31606a
Pulse Link: https://otx.alienvault.com/pulse/69bdb8e4c95a097d1f31606a
Pulse Author: AlienVault
Created: 2026-03-20 21:15:16

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#AsyncRAT #BackDoor #CyberSecurity #Email #Espionage #InfoSec #MiddleEast #OTX #OpenThreatExchange #Phishing #RAT #SpearPhishing #Telecom #bot #AlienVault

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Analysis of the Spear-Phishing and KakaoTalk-Linked Threat Campaign

Pulse ID: 69bb25f8570a0b789b695218
Pulse Link: https://otx.alienvault.com/pulse/69bb25f8570a0b789b695218
Pulse Author: Tr1sa111
Created: 2026-03-18 22:23:52

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#CyberSecurity #InfoSec #OTX #OpenThreatExchange #Phishing #SpearPhishing #bot #Tr1sa111

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Analysis of the Spear-Phishing and KakaoTalk-Linked Threat Campaign

The Konni Group conducted a sophisticated multi-stage attack campaign, initiating with a spear-phishing email disguised as a North Korean human rights lecturer appointment. The attack progressed through execution of a malicious LNK file, installation of remote access malware, and long-term persistence for data theft. A key feature was the unauthorized access to victims' KakaoTalk PC applications, used to distribute additional malicious files to selected contacts. The campaign employed multiple RAT families, including EndRAT, RftRAT, and RemcosRAT, with a distributed C2 infrastructure across Finland, Japan, and the Netherlands. The threat actor's tactics included trust-based propagation, account session abuse, and modular payload deployment, highlighting the need for advanced behavior-based detection and multi-layered defense strategies.

Pulse ID: 69ba831f2287b29db4e4645e
Pulse Link: https://otx.alienvault.com/pulse/69ba831f2287b29db4e4645e
Pulse Author: AlienVault
Created: 2026-03-18 10:49:03

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#CyberSecurity #DRat #DataTheft #Email #Finland #ICS #InfoSec #Japan #Konni #Korea #LNK #Malware #NorthKorea #OTX #OpenThreatExchange #Phishing #RAT #Remcos #RemcosRAT #Rust #SpearPhishing #TheNetherlands #bot #AlienVault

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Konni Hijacks KakaoTalk Accounts in Spear Phishing Malware Campaign

Pulse ID: 69b90cf1f7d81be697e032b4
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Pulse Author: cryptocti
Created: 2026-03-17 08:12:33

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#CyberSecurity #InfoSec #Konni #Malware #OTX #OpenThreatExchange #Phishing #SpearPhishing #bot #cryptocti

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COVERT RAT: Phishing Campaign

A sophisticated multi-stage infection chain targets Argentina's judicial ecosystem using spear-phishing tactics and authentic-looking judicial content. The campaign employs a carefully crafted ZIP archive containing a weaponized LNK shortcut, BAT-based loader script, and judicial-themed PDF decoy. The attack chain leads to the deployment of a Rust-based Remote Access Trojan (RAT) that demonstrates extensive anti-VM, anti-sandbox, and anti-debugging techniques. The RAT establishes a resilient command-and-control channel, supports modular commands for various malicious activities, and implements full lifecycle management. The operation, dubbed 'Operation Covert Access,' aims to secure long-term access within high-trust institutional settings, highlighting the need for improved defenses against socially engineered intrusion chains.

Pulse ID: 69b821c38b5e35d90728323e
Pulse Link: https://otx.alienvault.com/pulse/69b821c38b5e35d90728323e
Pulse Author: AlienVault
Created: 2026-03-16 15:29:07

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#CyberSecurity #ICS #InfoSec #LNK #OTX #OpenThreatExchange #PDF #Phishing #RAT #RemoteAccessTrojan #Rust #SpearPhishing #Trojan #ZIP #bot #AlienVault

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Operation CamelClone: Multi-Region Espionage Campaign Targets Government and Defense Entities Amidst Regional Tensions

Operation CamelClone is a multi-region espionage campaign targeting government and defense entities in Algeria, Mongolia, Ukraine, and Kuwait. The attackers use spear-phishing emails with malicious ZIP archives containing lure documents and shortcuts. The infection chain involves a JavaScript loader called HOPPINGANT, which downloads additional payloads from public file-sharing websites. The campaign abuses legitimate tools like Rclone for data exfiltration to MEGA cloud storage. Targeting patterns suggest intelligence gathering objectives, focusing on foreign policy, defense capabilities, and diplomatic alignments of countries navigating major-power rivalries. The operation's use of public services for payload hosting and data exfiltration makes network-based detection challenging.

Pulse ID: 69b7db1d163d9323dbb20827
Pulse Link: https://otx.alienvault.com/pulse/69b7db1d163d9323dbb20827
Pulse Author: AlienVault
Created: 2026-03-16 10:27:41

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#Cloud #CyberSecurity #Email #Espionage #FileSharing #Government #InfoSec #Java #JavaScript #OTX #OpenThreatExchange #Phishing #RAT #Rclone #SpearPhishing #UK #Ukr #Ukraine #ZIP #bot #AlienVault

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MAAS VIP_Keylogger Campaign

A sophisticated keylogger campaign has been discovered, utilizing spear-phishing emails with attachments containing hidden malware. The campaign targets multiple countries, employing various packaging styles and execution methods. The malware, known as VIP_Keylogger, is delivered using steganography and process hollowing techniques. It focuses on stealing sensitive information from browsers, email clients, and other applications. The keylogger captures browser data, decrypts passwords, and exfiltrates information through multiple channels, including email. While some features appear disabled, the malware demonstrates advanced capabilities in data theft and evasion techniques.

Pulse ID: 69b7e0b1a4e3419dfc024013
Pulse Link: https://otx.alienvault.com/pulse/69b7e0b1a4e3419dfc024013
Pulse Author: AlienVault
Created: 2026-03-16 10:51:29

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#Browser #CyberSecurity #DataTheft #Email #InfoSec #KeyLogger #MaaS #Malware #OTX #OpenThreatExchange #Password #Passwords #Phishing #RAT #SpearPhishing #Steganography #Word #bot #AlienVault

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La santé sous perfusion, face aux cyberattaques

Longtemps, les hôpitaux comme les cabinets médicaux, ont été des refuges. Des lieux où l’on venait chercher un remède, un répit, parfois une espérance.

En février 2026, la France découvre que 19 millions de patients ont leurs données administratives compromises dans une fuite liée à l’éditeur de logiciels médicaux Cegedim.

L’incident ne vise pas directement les serveurs de l’entreprise, mais les comptes professionnels de médecins utilisant ses outils. Au-delà du choc, cette affaire révèle une transformation profonde : la médecine est devenue l’une des nouvelles cibles privilégiées du cybercrime industriel.

https://librexpression.fr/au-chevet-du-malade-assailli-de-cyberattaques

(Crédits : Sarci Filippo/Pixabay)

#akira #cegedim #Cl0p #email #cyberattack #databreaches #eastwood #europe #europol #France #IA #informatique #infostealers #kidflix #librexpression #NIS2 #phishing #raas #ransomware #saas #spearphishing #threaths #warfare