

If delayed any longer, the criminals will set the decryption price to $980.
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The note specifies that the victim can get the decryption tool for $490 (with 50% discount) if one manages to contact the attackers and settle an agreement within 3 full days (72 hours). There are two email addresses provided in the threatening note – and. According to the crooks, the victim needs to contact the attackers via email. The criminals behind the virus know that the information stored on victim’s computer is extremely relevant for the computer user, therefore they provide a “solution” in the ransom note ( _readme.txt file). Files encrypted in such way become impossible to open, edit or view, so the victim loses access to important work files, study progress or personal memories – such as photos and videos saved on the computer. While encryption is designed to secure information (such as online communications or military-grade secrets), the cybercriminals use it for malevolent purpose. The virus they use for this matter uses a combination of robust encryption algorithms – Salsa20 additionally secured with RSA-2048 – to make your files inaccessible. In other words, the operators of SHGV ransomware virus try to extort you after corrupting all of your files with their malicious software. This text file left by the virus is widely known as the “ransom note” in which the cybercriminals explain that the only way to get SHGV decryption tool to recover all files is to pay a large ransom. At the same time, the ransomware drops notes called _readme.txt in every scanned folder. For example, a file previously called 1.jpg becomes 1.jpg.shgv after the cyberattack.

During the attack, this computer virus encrypts all photos, documents, databases, archives, videos and other data formats and marks them with additional. SHGV ransomware is a variant of STOP/DJVU virus that encrypts all files on your system.
