This is called survivorship bias.
Many experts are making the same mistake with regards to the nPetya ransomware.
I hate to point this out, because they are all experts I admire and respect, especially @MalwareJake, but it's still an error. An example is this tweet:
Errors happen. But look at the discipline put into the spreading code. That worked as intended. Only the ransomware components have bugs?— Jake Williams (@MalwareJake) July 1, 2017
The context of this tweet is the discussion of why nPetya was well written with regards to spreading, but full of bugs with regards to collecting on the ransom. The conclusion therefore that it wasn't intended to be ransomware, but was intended to simply be a "wiper", to cause destruction.
But this is just survivorship bias. If nPetya had been written the other way, with excellent ransomware features and poor spreading, we would not now be talking about it. Even that initial seeding with the trojaned MeDoc update wouldn't have spread it far enough.
In other words, all malware samples we get are good at spreading, either on their own, or because the creator did a good job seeding them. It's because we never see the ones that didn't spread.
With regards to nPetya, a lot of experts are making this claim. Since it spread so well, but had hopelessly crippled ransomware features, that must have been the intent all along. Yet, as we see from survivorship bias, none of us would've seen nPetya had it not been for the spreading feature.
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