A talk with Dr Anya Shortland about the economics of ransomware and the gray-zone institutions that let extortion markets function when nobody can truly enforce trust. We dig into how cyber insurance quietly becomes a form of governance, why data leaks change the game, and what national security risks emerge as everything gets connected. • criminal markets that sit between legal firms and underworld gangs • insurance as governance through protocols, repeat play, and incident response packages • why victims amplify risk when they throw money at crises • the origin story of early ransomware and the transaction costs that made it fail • step-by-step ransomware mechanics from phishing to exfiltration to encryption • how gangs price ransoms by reading cash flow and insurance certificates • leak sites, privacy regulation, and third-party liability as bargaining leverage • why cyber insurance is fragmented and slow to enforce security standards • deductibles, coverage caps, and market hardening that push better cybersecurity • AI-enabled phishing and the asymmetric arms race between attackers and defenders • state-linked ransomware, impunity jurisdictions, and critical infrastructure threats • efficiency versus resilience in smart cities and the Internet of Things
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