The lure of easy money was too much for these hackers to stay retired, it would appear.
Brian Krebs reports:
The cybercriminals behind the GandCrab ransomware-as-a-service (RaaS) offering recently announced they were closing up shop and retiring after having allegedly earned more than $2 billion in extortion payments from victims. But a growing body of evidence suggests the GandCrab team have instead quietly regrouped behind a more exclusive and advanced ransomware program known variously as "REvil," "Sodin," and "Sodinokibi."
"We are getting a well-deserved retirement," the GandCrab administrator(s) wrote in their farewell message on May 31. "We are a living proof that you can do evil and get off scot-free."
However, it now appears the GandCrab team had already begun preparations to re-brand under a far more private ransomware-as-a-service offering months before their official "retirement."
In late April, researchers at Cisco Talos spotted a new ransomware strain dubbed Sodinokibi that was used to deploy GandCrab, which encrypts files on infected systems unless and until the victim pays the demanded sum. A month later, GandCrab would announce its closure.