Ransomware Thugs Masquerade as Interpol to Entice Small Biz
The ransomware campaign relies on basic social engineering and stretches across multiple regions, including the US, Europe, Middle East, and elsewhere.
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The ransomware campaign relies on basic social engineering and stretches across multiple regions, including the US, Europe, Middle East, and elsewhere.
After a global lull, ransomware gangs are setting sights on a rich new arena: attacking EU organizations and their suppliers.
Multiple European law enforcement agencies recently disrupted Cryptomixer, a service allegedly used by cybercriminals to launder ill-gotten gains from ransomware and other cyber activities.
European organizations face an escalating cyber threat landscape as attackers leverage geopolitical tensions and AI-enhanced social engineering for attacks.
We can strip attackers of their power by implementing layered defenses, ruthless patch management, and incident response that assumes failure and prioritizes transparency.
Operation Cronos, a collab between authorities in the US, Canada, UK, Europe, Japan, and Australia — seizes data and website associated with the prolific cybercriminal organization and its affiliates.
The unrelated cyberattacks both occurred in January.
Several countries in Europe as well as the United States and Japan were involved in the operation, which is aimed at defanging one of the bigger names in ransomware.
Customers across several European countries are urged to update credentials in the wake of the attack that affected a gas-pipeline operator and power company.
A working group of European and US officials meet at The Hague to collaborate on ransomware operations and strategies.