LockBit Honcho Faces Sanctions, With Aussie Org Ramifications
Australian businesses and individuals now face government fines and consequences for paying ransoms or interacting with assets owned by LockBitSupp, aka Dmitry Yuryevich Khoroshev.
Sanctions shape cybersecurity by restricting transactions, technology access, and support linked to cyber operations and critical infrastructure risks.
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Background for this topic.
Sanctions are legal restrictions imposed by governments or international bodies on dealings with specified countries, organizations, individuals, or activities. They can limit payments, exports, imports, access to services, or provision of technical assistance; the exact prohibitions, exceptions, and licensing rules depend on the relevant jurisdiction. Cyber-related designations may identify operators, companies, or intermediaries linked to malicious activity, but sanctions are legal measures rather than technical indicators of compromise.
For security practitioners, sanctions create operational requirements around counterparties and technology flows. Organizations may need to screen customers, suppliers, service providers, and payment recipients, including aliases and ownership links, and restrict access or support where law requires. Export-control and sanctions rules can also affect distribution of cryptographic products, exploit research, cloud services, and incident-response assistance. Threat intelligence can help map sanctioned entities and evasion networks, while vulnerability-management and response teams should preserve records showing who received software, credentials, or technical help. Because lists and licensing conditions change, automated controls need human review and documented escalation rather than treating a name match as conclusive.
Australian businesses and individuals now face government fines and consequences for paying ransoms or interacting with assets owned by LockBitSupp, aka Dmitry Yuryevich Khoroshev.
Russian National Faces US Criminal Indictment, SanctionsThe Russian national known as LockBitSupp, head of ransomware-as-a-service group LockBit, came under indictment Tuesday in U.S. federal court and faces sanctions from the U.S. Department of the Treasury. Prosecutors say LockBitSupp's real identity is Dmitry Yuryevich Khoroshev.
The FBI, UK National Crime Agency, and Europol have unveiled sweeping indictments and sanctions against the admin of the LockBit ransomware operation, with the identity of the Russian threat actor being revealed for the first time. [...]