More than 640,000 cases of remote fraud were reported in Russia in 2024, while the damage they caused exceeded 170 billion rubles ($2.1 bln), the Public Relations Center of the Federal Security Service (FSB), reported.
According to the FSB, “the measures taken stopped the functioning of the illicit virtual communications center, seized more than 1,200 SIM boxes, 1,000 modems and telephones, 1.2 million SIM cards, and detained 208 of their owners.” The FSB officers also uncovered cases of the use of call centers to persuade Russian citizens to commit acts of disruption.
Read more…
Source: TASS News
Sign up for the Cyber Security Review Newsletter
The latest cyber security news and insights delivered right to your inbox
Related:
- Russia’s Sovereign Internet Creates Security Risks With Implications for Cyber (Re)Insurance While War in Ukraine Develops
September 10, 2022
A sovereign Russian internet could lead to cyber criminal safe havens, greater confidence that large-scale attacks can be carried out without consequences, and intelligence blindspots, according to a new report published today by cyber risk analytics expert CyberCube. The research “Ukraine Cyber War Update: Spotlight on activity six months later” examines the dramatic rise in the ...
- Bots manipulate public opinion in Russia-Ukraine conflict
September 8, 2022
Researchers from the University of Adelaide have found bots have had a major online presence during the war between Russia and Ukraine. The researchers analysed 5,203,764 tweets, retweets, quote tweets and replies posted to Twitter between 23 February 2022, and 8 March 2022, containing the hashtags #(I)StandWithPutin, #(I)StandWithRussia, #(I)SupportRussia, #(I)StandWithUkraine, #(I)StandWithZelenskyy and #(I)SupportUkraine. “We found that between 60 ...
- Estonia hit by ‘most extensive’ cyberattack since 2007 amid tensions with Russia over Ukraine war
August 17, 2022
Estonia was subject to “the most extensive cyberattack” since 2007, the Baltic state’s government said on Thursday, a day after it started removing Soviet-era war monuments from public areas in the wake of Russia’s February invasion of Ukraine. The Russia-based and pro-Russia hacker group Killnet said on the messaging app Telegram that it was responsible for ...
- Shuckworm: Russia-Linked Group Maintains Ukraine Focus
August 17, 2022
Recent Shuckworm activity observed by Symantec, a division of Broadcom Software, and aimed at Ukraine appears to be delivering information-stealing malware to targeted networks. This activity was ongoing as recently as August 8, 2022 and much of the activity observed in this campaign is consistent with activity that was highlighted by CERT-UA on July 26. The ...
- Disrupting SEABORGIUM’s ongoing phishing operations
August 15, 2022
The Microsoft Threat Intelligence Center (MSTIC) has observed and taken actions to disrupt campaigns launched by SEABORGIUM, an actor Microsoft has tracked since 2017. SEABORGIUM is a threat actor that originates from Russia, with objectives and victimology that align closely with Russian state interests. Its campaigns involve persistent phishing and credential theft campaigns leading to ...
- Activists use torrents to spread uncensored news to Russian pirates
August 1, 2022
A team of Ukrainian cyber-activists has thought of a simple yet potentially effective way to spread uncensored information in Russia: bundling torrents with text and video files pretending to include installation instructions. Named “Torrents of Truth,” the initiative is similar to “Call Russia,” a project to help break through Russian propaganda and open people’s eyes to ...

