Threat Database Ransomware 'Cyber Command of Oregon' Ransomware

'Cyber Command of Oregon' Ransomware

By ESGI Advisor in Ransomware

The 'Cyber Command of Oregon' Ransomware Trojan is a Police Ransomware infection designed to infect computers located in the state of Oregon, in the United States of America. Using the 'Cyber Command of Oregon' Ransomware, criminals try to fool inexperienced computer users into paying a ransom of $300 USD through an electronic payment service such as Ukash or MoneyPak. Police Ransomware infections are among the most popular forms of threats, and this scam has been active for several years. However, the 'Cyber Command of Oregon' Ransomware and its variants have caught the attention of PC security researchers because of their specificity, targeting computers located in a relatively small area, a single state inside a country. Most Police Ransomware infections are designed to target specific geographical locations, but are usually limited to a single country, rather than being as specific as the 'Cyber Command of Oregon' Ransomware. Variants of the 'Cyber Command of Oregon' Ransomware can take names such as the 'Cyber Command of Nevada' Ransomware, the 'Cyber Command of Ohio' Ransomware or the 'Cyber Command of California' Ransomware, targeting different states in the USA.

Paying the Fine Asked by the 'Cyber Command of Oregon' Ransomware isn't a Solution

The 'Cyber Command of Oregon' Ransomware modus operandi is simple: basically, criminals use the 'Cyber Command of Oregon' Ransomware to take a computer hostage and demand a ransom from the affected computer user. When the 'Cyber Command of Oregon' Ransomware is installed on a computer, the 'Cyber Command of Oregon' Ransomware blocks all access to the infected computer, preventing the computer user from gaining access to the infected computer's Desktop or files stored on the infected PC. As soon as the victim logs into Windows, the 'Cyber Command of Oregon' Ransomware displays a full screen message that accuses the victim of viewing child pornography and other illegal online activities. The 'Cyber Command of Oregon' Ransomware than claims that the victim is in danger of going to jail or being charged enormous fines of thousands of dollars unless a bogus police 'fine' of $300 USD is paid in full.

Luckily There are Easy Solutions for Ransomware Infections

If the 'Cyber Command of Oregon' Ransomware is installed on your computer, you should ignore its indications and avoid paying this fake police fine. Instead, bypass the 'Cyber Command of Oregon' Ransomware message using alternate start-up methods or Windows Safe Mode. Once you have bypassed the 'Cyber Command of Oregon' Ransomware message, remove this threat with the help of an updated anti-malware utility.

Messages

The following messages associated with 'Cyber Command of Oregon' Ransomware were found:

U.S.A. Cyber Crime Investigations
Cyber Command of Oregon
Attention! Your computer has been blocked up for safety reasons listed below.
You are accused of viewing/storage and/or dissemination of banned pornography (child pornography/zoophilia/rape etc). You have violated World Declaration on non-proliferation of child pornography. You are accused of committing the crime envisaged by Article 161 of United States of America criminal law.
Article 161 of United States Of America criminal law provides for the punishment of deprivation of liberty for terms from 5 to 11 years.
Also, you are suspected of violation of “Copyright and Related rights Law” (downloading of pirated music, video, warez) and of use use and/or dissemination of copyrighted content. Thus, you are suspected of violation of Article 148 of United States of America Criminal Law.
Article 148 of United States of America criminal law provides for the punishment of deprivation of liberty for terms from 3 to 7 years or 150 to 550 basic amounts fine.
It was from your computer, that unauthorized access had been stolen to information of State importance and to data closed for public Internet access.

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