American Hacker Gang Targets Bank BNI in Indonesia

Written By ization shop on Sunday, February 26, 2012 | Sunday, February 26, 2012

As Security Management reported in April, the Russian Business Network once stalked the Internet, providing Web hosting to various sorts of cybercriminals and their illegal activities, ranging from identity theft to child pornography, until an Italian Internet-provider cut its connection.
Now another group of Russian cybercriminals has been exposed, according to ComputerWorld.com. Located somewhere in South Russia, security researcher Joe Stewart, director of malware research at Atlanta-based SecureWorks Inc., says the group has swiped around 463,000 usernames and passwords since 2005.

Today, Stewart explained to ComputerWorld.com:

... the inner workings of a cybercrime gang using the Coreflood Trojan horse to infect massive numbers of PCs, then sift through the machines for confidential information, including bank account numbers and passwords .... Stewart has been releasing research on the group for more than a month as he works his way through more than 60GB of data he snatched from a server that the gang had been using as a data repository. In July, for instance, Stewart disclosed how they use a Microsoft program called PsExec to spread their password-stealing Trojan from a single infected PC to every Windows system on a company network.

2 komentar:

владимир слуцкер said...

Ohh God, I am so surprised by reading out this news. Thanks for posting this and making us aware if such kind of things which can be happen with anyone.

ization shop said...

yes thank you again
have visited this blog

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