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CYBER WARS
U.S. targets Central European cybergangs
by Staff Writers
Washington (UPI) Jul 28, 2011

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

Organized Central European cybercrime gangs are a security threat to the United States and have been targeted in a new U.S. strategy released this week.

U.S. President Barack Obama unveiled his Strategy to Combat Transnational Organized Crime Monday at the White House, warning that international criminals have "taken advantage of our increasingly interconnected world to expand their illicit enterprises."

Targeting cybercrime is high on the strategy list because, the document says, it "undermines worldwide confidence in the international financial system.

"Through cybercrime, transnational criminal organizations pose a significant threat to financial and trust systems -- banking, stock markets, e-currency and value and credit card services on which the world economy depends."

Obama said cybercriminals are receiving protection in their home countries.

"These networks also threaten U.S. interests by forging alliances with corrupt elements of national governments and using the power and influence of those elements to further their criminal activities," he said, adding, that in some cases, national governments "exploit these relationships to further their interests to the detriment of the United States."

Some estimates indicate that online frauds perpetrated by Central European cybercrime networks have defrauded U.S. citizens or entities of approximately $1 billion in a single year, the report said.

Focusing more security emphasis on cybercrime is justified, it said, because computers and the Internet are involved in "most" international crime. But, the White House warned, the United States faces a "critical shortage of investigators" with the deep expertise needed to follow digital evidence trails.

Obama also used the opportunity to declare sanctions on four of the world's largest criminal gangs -- Italy's Camorra, the Japanese Yakuza, the Los Zetas of Mexico and Brothers' Circle of Russia -- imposing a freeze on all property owned by them in the United States, The Voice of America reported.

The focus on Central and Eastern Europe is well-placed, says analysts who call the countries of Central Europe, especially the Czech Republic and Hungary, major centers for powerful international crime syndicates who have managed to set up shop in the midst of the European Union.

The Flare Network, a group of European anti-crime civil societies, said in January that Hungary is a "global epicenter" of the illegal pornography industry.

The sex industry in Central Europe (including online crime as well as clubs, movies and brothels) generates $7.3 billion per year, it said.

Another ubiquitous and costly form of cybercrime frequently launched from Central Europe is "botnet" technology -- networks of computers used without their owner's knowledge for cybercrime. The "zombie" computers can be used by their controllers for such crimes as spamming and the theft of credit card information.

Botnets can also be used to carry out politically motivated cyberattacks, the EU's "cybersecurity" agency, ENISA, said in March when it studied the size of the problem and issued recommendations after consulting with computer experts.

ENISA's Giles Hogben said one of the conclusions was they botnets didn't have to be big to be dangerous.

"Size is not everything -- the number of infected machines alone is an inappropriate measure of the threat," he said.




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Hackers access data on 35 mln S. Koreans: agency
Seoul (AFP) July 28, 2011 - Hackers using an Internet address registered in China have gained access to major South Korean websites and may have stolen the private information of 35 million users, authorities said Thursday.

They breached the systems of Nate (www.nate.com) and Cyworld (www.cyworld.com), both run by SK Communications, the Korea Communications Commission said.

Nate is a search engine with 25 million users and Cyworld is a social networking website with 33 million users in a country with a population of 48.6 million.

From the two sites combined, information on about 35 million users such as names, web IDs, phone numbers, e-mail addresses and resident registration numbers appear to have been leaked, the commission said in a statement.

SK Communications has asked police to investigate the cyber attack, commission official Kim Kwang-Su told AFP, adding his office was still investigating the incident.

"We have no information on who the hackers were. This could be the biggest hacking incident in our country," he said.

The previous worst computer security breach was in February 2008, when Internet Auction -- a subsidiary of US firm eBay -- was hacked. This led to the theft of private information on more than 10 million users.

"We took security steps after detecting a malicious code originating from an IP (Internet protocol) address from China on Tuesday," said SK Communications spokeswoman Koo Ki-Hyang.

"Our probe is still under way but we believe information on an estimated 35 million users might have been leaked."

South Korea, the world's most wired nation with more than 90 percent of homes connected to the Internet, has expressed concern about cyber attacks by Chinese and North Korean hackers.

In 2004 hackers based in China allegedly used information-stealing viruses to break into the computer systems of Seoul government agencies.

Seoul accused Pyongyang of staging cyber attacks on websites of major South Korean government agencies and financial institutions in March this year and in July 2009.

In May South Korea said a North Korean cyber attack paralysed operations at one of its largest banks. North Korea reportedly maintains elite hacker units.





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CYBER WARS
Britain arrests suspected LulzSec spokesman: police
London (AFP) July 27, 2011
British police arrested a 19-year-old man in a remote Scottish archipelago on Wednesday on suspicion of being a spokesman for the Lulz Security and Anonymous computer hacking groups, Scotland Yard said. Officers from a London-based cybercrime unit detained the man in a "pre-planned intelligence-led operation" on the Shetland Islands, off the northeast coast of Scotland, London's Metropolitan ... read more


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