 ransomware is a type of malicious software from CryptoViral that threatens to publish the victim's data or potentially block access to it unless a ransom is paid. While some simple ransomware may lock the system in a way which is not difficult for a knowledgeable person to reverse, more advanced malware uses a technique called CryptoViral extortion, in which it encrypts the victim's files, making them inaccessible, and demands a ransom payment to decrypt them. In a properly implemented CryptoViral extortion attack, recovering the files without the decryption key is an intractable problem, and difficult to trace digital currencies such as Udkush and Crypto Current Key are used for the ransoms, making tracing and prosecuting the perpetrators difficult. ransomware attacks are typically carried out using the trojan that is disguised as a legitimate file that the user is tripped into downloading or opening when it arrives as an email attachment. However, one high-profile example, the water-creasy worm traveled automatically between computers without user interaction. Starting from around 2012 the use of ransomware scams has grown internationally. In June 2013, vendor McCarthy released data showing that it had collected more than doubled the number of samples of ransomware that quarter than it had in the same quarter of the previous year. A Crypto Locker was particularly successful, procuring an estimated US $3 million before it was taken down by authorities, and CryptoAll was estimated by the US Federal Bureau of Investigation, FBI to have accrued over US $18m by June 2015.