BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  Ransomeware turf war
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Thu, 23 Apr 2026 09:17:18 -0500
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'We will reveal their identity photos, names, location, and other': Experts 
reveal extraordinary battle between rival ransomware gangs  and how victims 
can get their data back

Date:
Wed, 22 Apr 2026 19:55:00 +0000

Description:
A ransomware group is threatening to expose a rivals members while offering 
victims decryption, creating a risky and unusual cybercrime conflict.

FULL STORY
The ransomware ecosystem has never been known for trust or 
cooperation, but a new conflict has pushed intra-criminal warfare into 
uncharted territory. 

A cybercrime group called 0APT has threatened to expose the identities of 
individuals affiliated with a rival ransomware operation known as Krybit. In 
a leaked blog post, 0APT issued an unusual ultimatum to its fellow criminals. 
"If the group does not make the payment or contact us, we will reveal their 
identity photos, names, location, and more," the post stated.
 
Double-extortion model: The threat also contained an unexpected offer directed
at Krybit's original victims: "And if you are one of their victims, contact 
us to get your data unlocked." 

0APT is using a double-extortion model that relies on the threat of 
reputational damage to pressure victims into paying ransoms. 

That leverage evaporates almost completely when the target is another 
ransomware group, since criminal enterprises have no legitimate reputation to 
protect. 

Cybersecurity researchers note that the tactic loses much of its sting in 
this context, yet 0APT has proceeded as if following a conventional playbook. 

The group leaked a small sample of allegedly stolen Krybit data as a warning 
shot and has threatened a full dump if no payment arrives. 

Eric Taylor, owner of Barricade Cyber Solutions in South Carolina, has 
analyzed the small number of Krybit files already released by 0APT. 

His team discovered plaintext credentials belonging to Krybit operators and 
affiliates, along with five cryptocurrency wallet addresses.

Notably, the team found no evidence of a single paid ransom to Krybit, 
suggesting the group may have been less successful than its public claims 
implied. 

Krybit's website is currently offline, replaced by a splash page that reads: 
"Everything will return to work shortly. We apologize for this. We are sorry 
for the inconvenience." 

This type of intra-rivalry is not entirely without precedent. In 2025, a 
group called DragonForce attacked rival groups BlackLock and Mamona by 
defacing their websites and leaking internal communications. 

DragonForce also seemingly took over and later shut down the operation of 
former ransomware kingpin RansomHub in April last year after a month of 
infighting. 

Security firm Halcyon has noted that 0APT "poses a legitimate threat" and 
shows "credible technical depth," though within its first 48 hours, the group 
posted a list of hundreds of victims that almost certainly contained inflated 
claims. 

For organizations that have been encrypted by Krybit, the current conflict 
creates an unusual opportunity. 

Victims should ensure their firewall logs and network traffic data are 
preserved, as these may contain evidence of the attack. 

Although 0APT seems to offer a way out for Krybits victims, there is a need 
for caution because the former remains a cybercriminal. 

Whether 0APT actually possesses decryption keys for Krybit's victims remains 
unproven, and trusting one criminal group to rescue you from another carries 
obvious risks. 

The situation is extraordinary, but the safest path for any victim is still 
to rely on professional defenders rather than rival attackers. 

Via The Register

Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/pro/security/we-will-reveal-their-identity-photos-na
mes-location-and-other-experts-reveal-extraordinary-battle-between-rival-ranso
mware-gangs-and-how-victims-can-get-their-data-back

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