WAKV (1Kw), which serves Allegan and Kalamazoo counties, is run out of the basement of owner Jim Higgs’ 144-year-old home in Plainwell.
On Jan. 9, crooks used software called “ransomware” to remotely shut down the computers Higgs uses to get his station on the air. His files were encrypted so he couldn’t get to them.
“Our entire music library, the audio files, all of our jingles, all of our commercials, all of our announcer voice tracks — everything locked,” Higgs listed. “There was an icon on my screen and it said that, ‘We have locked up your files and if you want them unlocked then you will have to pay us $500.'”
WAKV 980 AM Coverage Area |
Jim Higgs, WAKV |
“People have said this for years: They told me this for years, back things up, back things up. Well, this is why,” Higgs said.
Higgs said he was fortunate that he did not lose any commercial money, but he has the cover the expenses of bringing in his on-air talent to re-voice all of the stuff he already had.
Higgs said he doesn’t remember clicking on anything suspicious that would have infected his computer.
To protect yourself from ransomware and other malware, avoid clicking on pop-up ads or windows, emails from senders you don’t know, and shady websites. Keep your firewall turned on and run reputable antivirus programs regularly.
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