For years, cybersecurity experts preached the same advice: maintain reliable backups.
Businesses that listened are now seeing the benefits. Last year, only 28% of ransomware victims paid the ransom, a sharp decline from previous years. Companies with strong backup and disaster recovery plans were able to wipe infected systems, restore their data, and continue operating without paying cybercriminals.
Attackers noticed.
And they changed their tactics.
The Rise of Data Extortion Attacks
Many modern ransomware groups have stopped encrypting files altogether.
Instead of locking your systems and demanding payment for a decryption key, they quietly steal sensitive business data and threaten to publish it unless you pay.
Customer records. Financial documents. Employee information. Contracts. Proprietary business data.
The message is simple:
Pay us, or we release everything.
This tactic, often called data extortion ransomware or extortion-only attacks, creates a problem that backups cannot solve.
You can restore every file on your network within hours, but you can’t restore privacy once sensitive data has been stolen. A backup won’t prevent leaked customer information, regulatory penalties, or reputational damage.
Why Small and Mid-Sized Businesses Are Prime Targets
This shift is hitting small and mid-sized businesses particularly hard.
According to recent ransomware reporting, companies with fewer than 200 employees and less than $25 million in annual revenue are targeted more frequently than large enterprises.
The reason is simple:
- Small businesses often store valuable customer and financial data.
- Security teams and budgets are typically smaller.
- Cybercriminals know smaller organizations are more likely to pay quickly to avoid public exposure.
Industries commonly targeted include:
- Medical and healthcare practices
- Accounting and financial firms
- Manufacturing companies
- Legal offices
- Professional service businesses
The New Cybersecurity Question Every Business Must Answer
For years, business continuity planning focused on one question:
“Can we recover if we’re hit by ransomware?”
Today, there’s a second question that may be even more important:
“What happens if our data is stolen and published?”
Consider the impact:
- A medical practice could face HIPAA violations and patient privacy breaches.
- An accounting firm could expose sensitive client financial information.
- A manufacturer could lose confidential designs, pricing information, and contracts.
- A professional services company could damage years of client trust overnight.
Downtime can often be recovered from.
A major data breach can affect a business for years.
Why Backups Are Still Important—But No Longer Enough
Backups remain a critical part of any cybersecurity strategy.
You should still:
- Maintain regular backups.
- Test restoration procedures.
- Keep backups isolated from your production network.
- Verify that backups can be recovered quickly during an emergency.
But backups are now only one layer of defense.
Modern cybersecurity requires preventing attackers from accessing and exfiltrating sensitive data in the first place.
How Businesses Can Protect Against Data Theft
Reducing ransomware and data breach risk requires a proactive security approach, including:
Monitoring for Unusual Data Activity
Large data transfers, abnormal user behavior, and suspicious file access patterns can indicate an attacker is preparing to steal information.
Restricting Access to Sensitive Data
Not every employee needs access to every file. Limiting permissions reduces the damage a compromised account can cause.
Detecting Intruders Early
Most attackers spend days—or even weeks—inside a network before launching an attack. Early detection can stop a breach before data leaves your environment.
Understanding Where Sensitive Data Lives
Many businesses don’t know where all of their critical data is stored or who can access it. Identifying these risks is often the first step toward reducing them.
The Security Gap Most Small Businesses Miss
Many small businesses have invested heavily in recovery and backup solutions.
That was the right strategy when ransomware attacks focused solely on encrypting files.
Today’s attacks are different.
If you have reliable backups but have never assessed whether someone could quietly extract sensitive business data without triggering an alert, that’s a gap worth addressing.
Schedule a Cybersecurity Assessment
We’ll help you identify where sensitive data lives, who has access to it, and where attackers could potentially move through your environment unnoticed.
Book a consultation today and discover the risks before an attacker does: https://www.rstechnology.net/contact-us/



