Because if only University computers had been affected nobody would have died.
If this was just some ransomware attack it would be barely newsworthy, and we sure wouldn't be discussing it. The death is what makes it interesting. And in this context it is important that the hospital wasn't even the intended target but was caught in the crossfire.
That doesn't justify anything, but I think we can all agree that extortion is a less severe crime than murder.
I get your point, but the tone in some of these is borderline defensive of ransomware. As if it would be legit otherwise, except they just misfired in this case
If that's the case then just to clarify: I think ransomware is like a digital protection racket. You either pay up or they try their best to burn your business down. But it's even worse, because even if you have every intention to pay (which you shouldn't), it still causes you downtime that's probably worse than the ransom itself. It's not something I would wish on anybody, and it's a drag on the entire economy. We should prosecute the perpetrators wherever we can.
But if I had to assign jail sentences, a ransomware author would get a decade or two (add another decade in this case for manslaughter), a murderer would get a life sentence. Life over property.
It is important to recognize that crimes have different levels. Society understands that, and it's encoded in our laws in the way we define scaling punishments, and have a difference between misdemeanors and felonies.
For thefts, there's a distinction between "burglary", "robbery", and "robbery with a deadly weapon".
And in this case-- comparing ransomware of a university to terrorism is disproportionate.
FYI I’m not the original poster who commented on the terrorism aspect, but I think ransomware is difficult to categorize because it is often a spray and pray-type attack. And occasionally a vulnerability and other infection vectors line up neatly enough to cause huge damage.
So in this case, the better analogy would be explosives - someone tried to blow a safe to get the money inside but the explosion also killed an innocent bystander.
Isn’t that like saying that if someone burns down an abandoned building and accidentally kills the squatters living inside that they shouldn’t be prosecuted for man slaughter as well as arson?
We're going down a rabbit hole away from the main topic, but "depraved indifference" can lead to murder charges in some states. And burning down a building without checking if anybody's inside would definitely be depraved indifference.
If this was just some ransomware attack it would be barely newsworthy, and we sure wouldn't be discussing it. The death is what makes it interesting. And in this context it is important that the hospital wasn't even the intended target but was caught in the crossfire.
That doesn't justify anything, but I think we can all agree that extortion is a less severe crime than murder.