Insider threats rank among the most dangerous strategies in cyber-crime. Few employees encounter them. Even fewer speak openly about their experiences.
I recently became one of those rare cases. A criminal group contacted me with an audacious offer: betray my employer for millions.
Sudden approach
The first message arrived out of the blue. “If you are interested, we can offer you 15% of any ransom payment if you give us access to your PC.”
The sender called themselves Syndicate. They reached me in July via Signal, an encrypted messaging app. I did not know them, but I immediately understood their aim.
They wanted me to help them infiltrate my employer’s systems. Their plan: steal data or install malware, then demand ransom. I would secretly receive a share.
Insider threats on the rise
Insider betrayal is becoming more common. Days earlier, Brazilian police arrested an IT worker accused of selling login credentials. Investigators linked the case to a $100m banking loss.
I sought advice from a senior editor and decided to play along. I wanted to see how criminals pitch such schemes.
Syndicate, later renaming themselves Syn, outlined the plan in detail.
The tempting offer
Syn asked me to provide login credentials and security codes. Their team would hack my employer and demand bitcoin ransom. I would receive a portion.
The offer escalated. “What if you took 25% of the final negotiation? We extract 1% of total revenue. You would never need to work again.”
Syn claimed the ransom could reach tens of millions. Authorities advise against paying, but Syn promised both secrecy and fortune.
Insider deals
Syn insisted the gang had succeeded before. He named two recent victims: a UK healthcare company and a US emergency services provider.
“You’d be surprised how many employees give us access,” he said.
He identified himself as “reach out manager” for Medusa, a ransomware-as-a-service operation. He claimed to be western and the only English speaker in the gang.
Medusa works like a criminal platform. Affiliates sign up and use its tools to hack organisations. Researchers say its leaders operate from Russia or allied states.
The group avoids Russian targets and promotes itself on Russian-language dark web forums.
Pressure mounts
Syn sent a US alert about Medusa, listing 300 victims. He shared darknet links and recruitment pages, urging me to deposit 0.5 bitcoin, around $55,000.
He described the deposit as guaranteed money once I provided credentials. “We aren’t bluffing. We are only here for money.”
He assumed I had privileged access. He asked technical questions and sent code to run on my laptop. I refused.
Escalation
After three days, I stalled, planning to alert the security team. Syn grew impatient.
“When can you do this? I’m not a patient person,” he warned. “I guess you don’t want to live on the beach in the Bahamas?”
He set a strict deadline. Then the harassment began.
My phone flooded with login prompts. Every minute, the security app asked me to approve access.
I recognised the tactic: MFA bombing. Hackers overwhelm victims until they approve a request. Uber suffered this attack in 2022.
It was alarming. The private chat had turned into direct pressure on my phone. It felt like intruders pounding at my door.
Cutting access
I knew one wrong tap would grant them full control. The system would treat it as a normal login. From there, they could explore sensitive networks.
I contacted the security team. We disconnected me completely: no email, no intranet, no accounts.
That evening, Syn sent a calm message. “The team apologises. We were testing your login page and are sorry if this caused issues.”
I explained I was locked out. Syn repeated the offer. I ignored him. Days later, he deleted his Signal account.
A sobering lesson
Eventually, my access was restored with stronger protections. The experience gave me firsthand insight into insider threat tactics.
Hackers constantly adapt and target insiders. Until this happened, I had not fully appreciated the risks.
It was a sobering reminder of the dangers every organisation faces today.
