MicroLogix Network Services, LLC Blog
Why Paying a Ransomware Demand is a Total Scam
Getting hit with ransomware feels like a digital kidnapping. Your files are locked, your business is paralyzed, and some hacker is demanding a massive bag of crypto to give you the keys back.
It’s tempting to just pay up to end the nightmare, but here’s the reality: Don’t do it. Even though attacks are hitting record highs this year, fewer people are actually paying than ever before. Here is why ghosting the hackers is the only winning move.
Why You Can’t Give In
Paying up isn't a get out of jail free card; it’s usually just the start of a bigger mess.
- You probably won't get your stuff back - You’re dealing with criminals, not tech support. About 92% of companies that pay don't even get all their data back. Usually, the files are corrupted or the decryption key they give you just doesn't work.
- You’re putting a target on your back - If you pay, you’re officially a payer. Hackers share lists of people who caved, and 80% of victims who pay get hit a second time—often by the same exact group.
- You’re funding the villains - Your money goes straight into building better AI tools to attack someone else or you again.
You could get sued by the government: In 2026, the FBI and other agencies are cracking down. If you pay a group that’s on a restricted list, you could end up facing massive federal fines on top of what you already lost.
How to Make “No” an Easy Choice
You can only tell a hacker to get lost if you have a backup plan that actually works. You want your stolen data to be an annoyance, not an end of the world scenario.
Get Immutable Backups
Regular backups aren't enough because modern viruses look for them first. You need immutable backups—data that is locked so it literally cannot be changed or deleted for a set amount of time, even by an admin.
The 3-2-1-1 Strategy
The old rules are dead. Here’s the new 2026 standard for your data:
- 3 copies of everything.
- 2 different storage types, like cloud and local.
- 1 copy off-site.
- 1 copy air-gapped, meaning it is totally offline and disconnected.
Don't Let Them Spread
If a hacker gets into one person’s laptop, they shouldn't be able to teleport to your main server. We use network segmentation, which is like fire doors in a building. If one room catches fire, the rest of the office stays safe.
Practice Your Fire Drills
A plan is just a PDF until you test it. We run tabletop exercises—basically a gaming session for IT—to make sure everyone knows how to kill an infection in minutes before it spreads.
Take the Power Back
Ransomware works because it creates panic. When you’ve got solid backups and a team that knows the drill, that Pay Now timer loses all its power. You don't have to be a hostage to your own data.
To see how we can help you protect your business from ransomware, call us today at (321) 282-3290.

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