(AFP Photo / Aamir Qureshi)The FBI has managed to bust an international criminal ring with the help of Facebook. The ten suspects allegedly infected 11 million computers around the world with software that defrauded victims of more than $850 million.Facebook’s security team assisted the US authorities in revealing the alleged source of the attacks, as well as identifying which users may have been hit. As a result, arrests were made globally, including from the UK, the US and New Zealand. Other suspects were detained in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Macedonia and Peru.The accused hackers employed the ‘Butterfly Botnet’ (robot + network), a system which steams credit card, bank account and other personal info via a “zombie army” of computers set up to forward transmissions (including spam or viruses) to other computers on the Internet. The users, like all the other victims, have no idea that their computers have been hijacked for criminal purposes. Some 11 million computers designated as “zombie” bots were compromised when their computers were infected with malicious software (malware) that allowed the hackers – bonnet operators – to use their victims’ computers remotely.Facebook users were targeted with the so-called ‘Yahos’ malware over a two year period – between 2010 and October 2012 – the FBI said.The FBI has suggested all users to update their operating systems regularly, use anti-virus software and more importantly, disconnect their computers from the Internet periodically in order not to fall victim to such cyber attacks.It is not the first time when social media, and particularly Facebook monitoring has been shown to be successful in uncovering criminal activity. In September, the NYPD brought charges against 49 gang members from the feuding “Rockstarz” and “Very Crispy Gangsters” in Brooklyn. The charges ended a turf war that had lasted three years, included ten shootings, and taken three lives. The feud was fueled in large part by public Facebook posts of gang members bragging about their exploits and taking photos of themselves on ‘enemy’ turf. With the number of cyber-attacks growing and hackers becoming increasingly sophisticated, New York City police commissioner Ray Kelly launched an anti-gang initiative called Operation Crew Cut in October. Kelly’s plan aims at cutting the emerging gangs down by turning crew members’ rising use of social media against them. The department had previously intended to double the size of its Gang Division from approximately 150 detectives to 300. … Read More
RedHack hacker group on trial in Turkey
A group of Internet hackers appeared in an
on Monday on charges of terrorism, the first time alleged cyber criminals have been put on trial in Turkey. Those arrested in suspicion of the attacks are mostly students who deny having the technical skills required to carry out such a hack.
has denied the allegations, saying 10 people currently being tried have no ties with the group and that the allegations of terrorism are simply part of the government’s policy against all of its opponents in the country.
The defendants, who deny the charges, risk prison sentences ranging from eight to 24 years if convicted. Redhack claims to be affiliated with the international hackers’ group Anonymous group, and has carried out several online attacks against state and private domains since 1997.
Shortly after the arrests, RedHack declared that the individuals taken into custody had no association with the group. After releasing the statement, the collective brought down several other police websites in an attempt to prove that the group was still operating in light of what RedHack believed to be the arrest of innocent individuals.
The only suspect in the case of women prisoners, college students Kerimoğlu emotion , the fact that no evidence was close to 9 months in prison,’s computer as evidence to show photographs of the Yilmaz Güney and Marine Gezmis criticized.
University student Alaattin Karagenç, the third arrested suspect, said he chatted with a RedHack member nicknamed “Manyak” about technological issues in an online chat room but had not received any instructions about hacking.
RedHack has attacked government websites and leaked information from them, and was previously listed as a terrorist group by the
. On July 3, RedHack revealed the identities of some foreign diplomatic personnel working in Turkey.
1 Million dollar hacked in 60 Seconds from Citibank
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FBI have arrested 14 people over the theft of $1 million from Citibank using cash advance kiosks at casinos located in Southern California and Nevada.
Authorities say the suspects would open accounts at Citibank, then go to casinos in California and Nevada and withdraw the money from cash-advance kiosks as many times as they could in a 60-second span. Someone had figured
FBI and computer scientists team up to catch hackers
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FBI’s Cyber Division has a new and sharper focus on cyber-intrusion ,”You are one click from compromising your network” FBI said. Giving priority to the labeling of suspects follows claims by the Pentagon that the military now has the capability to single out and retaliate against hackers.
FBI over the past year has put in place an initiative to uncover and investigate
FBI and computer scientists team up to catch hacker
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FBI’s Cyber Division has a new and sharper focus on cyber-intrusion ,”You are one click from compromising your network” FBI said. Giving priority to the labeling of suspects follows claims by the Pentagon that the military now has the capability to single out and retaliate against hackers.
FBI over the past year has put in place an initiative to uncover and investigate
Former LulzSec hacker pleads guilty to Sony case
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After last year’s big PlayStation Network hack a lot of hacking groups such as Anonymous and LulzSec were intensely publicized. Back in June, a massive hack was conducted on the Sony Pictures Website. The attack led to the theft of details on over 1 million accounts and was linked to the hacker group Lulzsec.
At the time, the hacker group claimed to have used a “very simple
Another hope in Hacker Gary McKinnon extradition
Gary’s 10 years spent living on a knife-edge has been nothing short of cruel and unnecessary punishment.
There is another new hope for Gary McKinnon who is fighting extradition after being accused of hacking US military computers. Computer hacker Gary McKinnon will win his 10-year legal battle against extradition have been significantly raised after Home Office-appointed psychiatrists warned that







