Ransomware Research

Booyah Ransomware

Booyah is a malicious ransomware strain that encrypts victim files and demands ransom payment for decryption. First observed in the wild on March 1, 2016, this ransomware has been actively targeting systems worldwide. Security researchers also track this malware under the aliases: Salam!.

Quick facts

Ransomware Family
Booyah
First Seen
March 1, 2016
Known Aliases
Salam!

How Booyah ransomware works

File encryption patterns

Booyah modifies encrypted files using specific patterns to mark them as encrypted:

Extensions added after encryption
.keyz

Ransom note and payment demands

After encrypting files, Booyah displays ransom notes demanding payment for file recovery:

fileWHATHAPPENDTOYOURFILES.TXT
notes/WHATHAPPENDTOYOURFILES.TXT
Location: EveryFolder
message
notes/note.txt
Location: OnceOnCompletion

Technical indicators

Associated executable files

The following executable files are associated with Booyah ransomware:

About this analysis

This Booyah ransomware analysis is part of Elastio's comprehensive ransomware detection database. Elastio provides advanced ransomware protection and recovery, helping organizations defend against and recover from ransomware attacks like Booyah.

Last updated: December 30, 2025

Detection coverage

Elastio detects Booyah inside your data and backups.

The Hunt Engine uses Deep File Inspection to identify Booyah across live data, replicated data, and backups. If this family is in your environment, Elastio finds it before encryption completes. Run a scan against your recovery points to confirm.

See How the Hunt Engine WorksRequest a Demo

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