⚡ Key Takeaways

Publicly reported ransomware attacks rose 47% year-over-year in 2025 while attacker revenues declined — driving groups like The Gentlemen to grow from 35 to 182 victims in a single quarter using pure data extortion without encryption. Backup-based defenses are now insufficient.

Bottom Line: Data classification, DLP deployment, and a pre-negotiated incident response retainer are now tier-1 priorities. The question is no longer ‘can we recover?’ — it is ‘what are the consequences of publication?’

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🧭 Decision Radar

Relevance for Algeria
High — Algerian enterprises and government-adjacent companies hold significant personal and financial data that makes them attractive exfiltration targets; backup-reliant defenses are widespread
Infrastructure Ready?
Partial — backup infrastructure has improved; DLP and data classification capability is limited to large enterprises
Skills Available?
No — ransomware negotiation expertise and DLP engineering are scarce in Algeria’s security talent market
Action Timeline
6–12 months — data classification and DLP deployment are multi-month programs; retainer agreements can be signed within weeks
Key Stakeholders
CISOs, legal counsel, board risk committees, incident response teams, cyber insurance buyers
Decision Type
Strategic

Quick Take: The 2026 shift to exfiltration-only ransomware invalidates the “restore from backup” defense strategy that many organizations have invested in. Enterprise security teams must now treat data classification, DLP, and pre-negotiated incident response retainers as tier-1 priorities — not because encryption threats are gone, but because they are no longer the primary risk.

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