There's a scam going around that involves impersonating ransomware group BianLian, warns the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
A company's executives received an extortion letter in the mail It claims to have come from ransomware operators BianLian The ...
A hacker has been sending physical letters to US businesses that falsely tell recipients they've been breached and threaten to release confidential information unless a ransom is paid. The FBI ...
All letters will be edited for clarity, grammar, spelling and length. If you wish to use snail mail, send your letter to Letters To The Editor, The Free Press, 418 South Second Street, Mankato MN ...
While not quite the same idea but in a similar vein, [Aaron Francis] shared an experience of creating handwriting robots to write thousands of letters. Why did [Aaron] need to write thousands of ...
April is National Card and Letter Writing Month, a celebration that was started by the United States Postal Service in 2001. While many rely on social media to reach out to others, or on text or email ...
This is how we got the story. Investigative reporter Nick McKenzie. The letter arrived via snail mail, and it read like a page from a Le Carre spy thriller. If my newspaper and I wanted to expose ...
PCMag editors select and review products independently. If you buy through affiliate links, we may earn commissions, which help support our testing. A hacker has been sending physical letters to ...
On Thursday, the FBI issued a warning that describes the scam. Ransoms letters (yep, snail mail) are sent to corporate executives claiming to be from "BianLian Group," a known Russian ransomware ...
The physical letters claim to come from the BianLian ransomware group. But the FBI says no one has been hacked, and it's just an old-school scheme to get potential victims to pay up.