Киберпреступность Risky Bulletin: Cybercrime losses passed $20 billion last year

Fuhgeddaboudit

Banned
Забанен
Регистрация
05.04.26
Сообщения
24
Реакции
2
Обратите внимание: если вы хотите заключить сделку с этим пользователем, он заблокирован.
Americans have lost almost $21 billion to cybercrime last year, more than any other since the FBI began tracking cybercrime data 25 years ago, the Для просмотра ссылки Войди или Зарегистрируйся in its yearly Internet Crime Report [Для просмотра ссылки Войди или Зарегистрируйся].

Investment scams were again the top category in terms of losses, with $8.6 billion reported stolen, and almost $6.2 billion of that sum being stolen as cryptocurrency.

Cyber-enabled fraud accounted for 85% of last year's losses, almost $17.7 billion.

Investment scams has been the category with the biggest reported losses in the report since 2022, with total losses rising every year, so it's no surprise here and anyone watching the infosec space was anticipating this result.


Last year was also the first time the FBI received more than one million cybercrime reports.

The agency says it is now receiving more than 3,000 complaints per day, a sign of the significant uptick in cybercrime operations.


All in all, the FBI IC3 Internet Crime Report is one of the most important indicators of cybercrime activity around the globe and is often used to inform and guide law enforcement crackdowns and legislative decisions.

Previous reports played a major role in a Для просмотра ссылки Войди или Зарегистрируйся signed early last month, with the Trump administration telling law enforcement agencies and the Justice Department to prioritize going after online cyber scam operators.

The order also involved the State Department, instructing the US embassies and state officials to pressure foreign governments that shelter cyber scam compounds to crack down on the problem.

Both Myanmar and Cambodia have already started moving against their sprawling cyber scam compound ecosystem, but that was mostly because of Chinese pressure rather than the US.

However, recent reports suggest that criminal syndicates are moving operations to new safe havens, such as Africa and the Middle East, and even some former Soviet states and parts of Europe.

It's definitely not a problem that will go away any time soon, mainly because of the ungodly amount of money cybercriminals are making, money that they often throw at authorities to look the other way.

© Для просмотра ссылки Войди или Зарегистрируйся

Ну вот, а всё говорили нигде нет таких денег как в рансоме.