// Prerequisites

What to read before The Ransomware Hunting Team

If The Ransomware Hunting Team feels too steep at beginner level, here is what to read first. Lighter books in the same topics that build the prerequisites this one assumes.

  1. 01 · 2017

    American Kingpin

    A propulsive account of how Ross Ulbricht built the Silk Road dark-web drug empire as Dread Pirate Roberts, and how a handful of investigators across rival agencies finally unmasked him.

    Beginner
    5/5Nick Bilton
  2. 02 · 2011

    Kingpin

    Kevin Poulsen's reconstruction of Max Butler's career — from white-hat consultant to running CardersMarket, the carding forum that consolidated the early-2000s underground — and the FBI investigation that finally took him down.

    Beginner
    5/5Kevin Poulsen
  3. 03 · 2014

    Spam Nation

    Brian Krebs's investigative deep-dive into the Russian-speaking pharma-spam economy of the late 2000s — the affiliate networks, the rivalries, and the people who ran them.

    Beginner
    4/5Brian Krebs
  4. 04 · 2014

    Countdown to Zero Day

    Kim Zetter's investigative reconstruction of Stuxnet, the joint US/Israeli operation that physically damaged Iranian uranium-enrichment centrifuges via a worm, and what its discovery revealed about state-level cyber capability.

    Beginner
    5/5Kim Zetter
  5. 05 · 2019

    Sandworm

    Long-form journalism on the GRU's hacking operations, the best non-technical book on what state-level cyber actually looks like.

    Beginner
    5/5Andy Greenberg
  6. 06 · 1999

    The Code Book

    A narrative history of cryptography from Caesar ciphers to public-key, told through the people and the wars that turned on broken codes. Still the best on-ramp to why crypto matters.

    Beginner
    5/5Simon Singh
  7. 07 · 1989

    The Cuckoo's Egg

    Clifford Stoll's first-person account of investigating a 75-cent accounting discrepancy at LBNL that turned into a year-long pursuit of a KGB-paid intruder across early-internet networks.

    Beginner
    5/5Clifford Stoll
  8. 08 · 2020

    The Hacker and the State

    Ben Buchanan's argument that state-on-state cyber operations are not deterrence-shaped (like nuclear) but signaling-shaped: countries use cyber to shape the environment, not to threaten escalation. Builds the case from declassified incidents.

    Beginner
    5/5Ben Buchanan
Back to The Ransomware Hunting TeamWhat to read after The Ransomware Hunting Team