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Seizure concerns the confiscation or disruption of devices, systems, or data, with implications for digital evidence, service access, and incident response.

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Seizure is the lawful taking or securing of devices, servers, domain names, accounts, cryptocurrency, or stored digital data by an authorized authority for an investigation or legal proceeding. In information-security reporting, the term usually concerns the acquisition of digital infrastructure or evidence, not a seizure-related medical event. Authorities may take physical equipment, redirect or disable online services, or obtain data from a provider under applicable legal process.

The security challenge is preserving evidence without changing it: investigators may document the chain of custody, isolate systems, and use forensic copies while protecting originals from alteration. Live systems can contain volatile evidence, while encryption, remote access, cloud tenancy, and deleted data complicate collection. Seized infrastructure may also contain unrelated customer or employee information, creating privacy and access-control obligations. For defenders, a seizure can interrupt services and signal an investigation; maintaining accurate asset ownership records, logs, backups, and documented legal or incident-response contacts helps establish what systems and data are affected.

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Redmond names alleged ringleader, claims 5K+ creds stolen and $100k pocketed Microsoft has seized 338 websites associated with RaccoonO365 and identified the leader of the phishing service - Joshua Ogundipe - as part of a larger effort to disrupt what Redmond's Digital Crimes Unit calls the "fastest-growing tool used by cybercriminals to steal Microsoft 365 usernames and passwords."…

Scumbags stole API keys, then started a hacking-as-a-service biz, it is claimed Microsoft has sued a group of unnamed cybercriminals who developed tools to bypass safety guardrails in its generative AI tools. The tools were used to create harmful content, and access to the tools were sold as a service to other miscreants.…

Also, script kiddies still a threat, Tornado Cash is back, UK firms lose billions to avoidable attacks, and more Infosec in brief Interpol and its financial supporters in the South Korean government are back with another round of anti-cybercrime arrests via the fifth iteration of Operation HAECHI, this time nabbing more than 5,500 people suspected of scamming and seizing hundreds of millions in digital and fiat currencies. …

Russia has seemingly decided who it wants Putin the Oval Office The Biden administration on Wednesday seized 32 websites and charged two employees of a state-owned media outlet connected to a $10 million scheme to distribute pro-Kremlin propaganda, and claimed the actions were necessary to counter Russia’s attempts to influence the upcoming US presidential election.…

That should solve the global cybercrime problem, right? Microsoft has taken down US-based infrastructure and websites used by a cybercrime group to sell fraudulent online accounts to other crooks including Scattered Spider, the infamous social-engineering and extortion crew that hacked two Las Vegas casinos over the summer.…

Suspected admin who went by 'Omnipotent' awaits UK decision on extradition to US After at least six years of peddling pilfered personal information, the infamous stolen-data market RaidForums has been shut down following the arrest of suspected founder and admin Diogo Santos Coelho in the UK earlier this year.…