Tag: Cyber

  • India records 18% surge in weekly cyber attacks in Jan-Mar 2023: Check Point

    India records 18% surge in weekly cyber attacks in Jan-Mar 2023: Check Point

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    New Delhi: Each organisation in India faced an average of 2,108 weekly attacks in the first quarter of 2023, around 18 per cent higher than that in the year-ago period, a Check Point report said on Friday.

    Cybercriminals are misusing legitimate tools like ChatGPT for code generation that can help less-skilled threat actors effortlessly launch cyberattacks, Trojanizing 3CXDesktop app for a supply chain attack etc for malicious gains, the report said.

    “During the first quarter of 2023, India average weekly attacks rose by 18 per cent in comparison to the corresponding period in 2022, with each organization facing an average of 2,108 weekly attacks per organization,” the report said.

    MS Education Academy

    Global weekly attacks rose by 7 per cent during the reported quarter versus same quarter last year with each organization facing an average of 1,248 attacks per week.

    Globally, the education and research sector faced the highest number of attacks, rising to an average of 2,507 attacks per organization per week, marking a 15 per cent increase compared to March 2022 quarter, the report said.

    “APAC region experienced the highest YoY surge in weekly attacks, with an average of 1,835 attacks per organization, marking a 16 per cent increase 1 out of every 31 organizations worldwide experienced a ransomware attack every week,” the report said.

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    #India #records #surge #weekly #cyber #attacks #JanMar #Check #Point

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Gurugram Police arrests man from Visakhapatnam in case of cyber fraud

    Gurugram Police arrests man from Visakhapatnam in case of cyber fraud

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    Gurugram: The Gurugram Police has arrested an accused in Rs 1 crore cyber fraud case from Visakhapatnam in Andhra Pradesh who had transferred money from a company in a fake bank account after hacking into the e-mail ID.

    The police have recovered a mobile phone and 2 SIM cards from his possession and also frozen the fake account of the accused.

    According to the police, on March 27 a complaint was received at cyber crime, east police station and the complainant alleged that a person hacked into the e-mail ID of his company and transferred Rs 87,17,714 by his company employee to an account with Kotak Mahindra Bank in the name of investment.

    MS Education Academy

    An FIR was registered and the probe was initiated.

    A team led by Cyber police station head inspector Jasveer finally nabbed the accused, identified as Manohar Appam, from Visakhapatnam.

    “The accused got the money transferred in a fake bank account after hacking into the e-mail ID but now he is in police custody. We will take him on remand after produced him before a city court on Friday,” said Priyanshu Dewan, ACP, Cyber.

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    #Gurugram #Police #arrests #man #Visakhapatnam #case #cyber #fraud

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

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  • Over 3 dozen cyber crime hotspots detected in 9 states: Sources

    Over 3 dozen cyber crime hotspots detected in 9 states: Sources

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    New Delhi: More than three dozen towns and villages of nine states — from Delhi to Andhra Pradesh and Gujarat to Assam — have become cyber crime hotspots which are being closely monitored by law enforcement agencies, sources said on Tuesday.

    Besides, a number of hostile countries have been trying for long to cripple India’s financial system and national security grid where additional preventive measures are put in place by the government.

    The states where the cyber crime hotspots have been located include Haryana, Delhi, Jharkhand, Bihar, West Bengal, Assam, Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat and Andhra Pradesh, they said.

    The emerging cyber crime hotspot cities, towns and villages are: Mewat, Bhiwani, Nuh, Palwal, Manota, Hasanpur, Hathan Gaon (all in Haryana), Ashok Nagar, Uttam Nagar, Shakarpur, Harkesh Nagar, Okhla, Azadpur (all in Delhi), Banka, Begusarai, Jamui, Nawada, Nalanda, Gaya (Bihar), Barpeta, Dhubri, Goalpara, Morigaon, Nagaon (Assam), Jamtara, Deoghar (Jharkhand), Asansol, Durgapur (West Bengal), Ahmedabad, Surat (Gujarat), Azamgarh (Uttar Pradesh) and Chittoor (Andhra Pradesh).

    The foreign cyber attackers mostly belong to countries like China, Pakistan and T rkiye, sources said.

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    #dozen #cyber #crime #hotspots #detected #states #Sources

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Easy address change process in Aadhaar major cause of cyber fraud: Police

    Easy address change process in Aadhaar major cause of cyber fraud: Police

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    Delhi: Police officers engaged in probing cyber-related offences believe that the simple process of upgrading the addresses of individuals in the Aadhaar data has emerged as one of the biggest causes of cyber fraud.

    An Aadhaar card holder can get his or her address changed with the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI), which issues Aadhaar cards, in multiple ways.

    One of those is to download an address-change certificate from the UIDAI’s website and upload it after getting it signed by any of the various public authorities, such as an MP, an MLA, a municipal councillor, a gazetted officer of Group “A” and Group “B” and MBBS doctors, among others.

    In several solved cybercrime cases, the investigators have found that fraudsters used fake rubber stamps and forged signatures of pubic authorities to upgrade their personal details in the Aadhaar database.

    In some cases, even public authorities put their stamps and signature carelessly, without verifying the credentials of individuals.

    “In a cyber fraud case, we found that an MLA had signed the certificate for a change in the address of the accused, on the basis of which he got his address changed in the Aadhaar database. On further investigation, we found that the MLA had authorised his office boy to put stamps and his signature on such certificates,” an investigator said.

    In March 2022, a probe team from the Cyber Police Station of Central district of the Delhi Police, led by Inspector Khemendra Pal Singh, cracked a case in which six people, including two Nigerian citizens, used to dupe young women by posing as non-resident Indian (NRI) grooms.

    During the investigation, the team found that the accused had got their addresses changed in the Aadhaar database with the help of a doctor who had signed on their certificates for upgrading the addresses by charging merely Rs 500.

    “Cybercriminals change their addresses, in some cases multiple times, in their Aadhaar database and get multiple accounts opened with different banks to transfer money from the victims’ accounts,” Prashant Gautam, Deputy Commissioner, Intelligence Fusion and Strategic Operations (IFSO), Delhi Police, said.

    “Since police do not have access to the Aadhaar data, we need to approach the Delhi High Court in each case to find out the original details of the accused, which causes a delay and makes our job challenging,” the officer added.

    Investigators say there seems to be no way of cross-verifying the changed credentials of individuals uploaded on the UIDAI website.

    They feel the need to have some mechanism in place where the process of upgrading the address can be made more secure and forged stamps and signatures of public authorities can be avoided.

    Gautam said besides address change, which is a bigger cause of concern, cyber cheats are using other innovative ways to manipulate their personal details. In a recent case, the IFSO arrested a mastermind and two accused who used to obtain loans from banks by exploiting the vulnerability of the Aadhaar system.

    “During interrogation, the accused claimed that they manipulated the system of updating details in Aadhaar by replacing the fingerprints of the left hand with the fingerprints of the right hand and by putting coloured contact lenses in the eyes to dupe the biometric process of recognising the retina,” Gautam said.

    A section of cyber experts feels that at present, cybercrime is a very minuscule part of the use of technology in the financial world and making the address-change process cumbersome will cause more hardship to people as compared to its benefits.

    “Despite that, it is crucial for policymakers to plug in the shortcomings, without making the process complicated,” a cyber expert, who did not wish to be quoted, said.

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    #Easy #address #change #process #Aadhaar #major #cyber #fraud #Police

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Identify cyber hotspots, maintain data profile of cyber crimes: Parliamentary Panel

    Identify cyber hotspots, maintain data profile of cyber crimes: Parliamentary Panel

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    New Delhi: A parliamentary panel has recommended that the Union Home Ministry may encourage the state governments to identify cyber hotspots in their state and maintain a data profile on the cyber crimes being committed in those hotspots.

    The Parliamentary Standing Committee on Home Affairs headed by BJP MP Brijlal noted that it believed that despite the boom in Internet connectivity in the country, there might be a sizeable population in various states and Union Territories which may have very limited access to it due to various reasons.

    “The committee recommends that the ministry may encourage state governments to identify cyber hotspots in their state and maintain data profile on the cyber crimes being committed in those hotspots and the measures taken to contain those crimes,” the panel said in its report submitted to Parliament on Friday.

    This data, the panel said, may be collected by the ‘Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre (I4C)’ and shared with other states for framing of policies by them to tackle such types of cyber crimes.

    The committee, therefore, recommended that the police force may adopt various strategies such as publicising its achievements in the meetings of the community, village, and district-level committees at regular intervals for increasing the police-people interaction, organising awareness weeks and Jan Sabhas, among others.

    The focus should be on a nationwide capacity-building campaign, with an emphasis on developing and inculcating high professional and ethical standards as well as attitudinal and social skills in the personnel, it noted.

    ?The committee noted that states and Union Territories have been requested to install IP cameras at strategic locations in all police stations and to conduct a periodic audit of all the installed CCTVs.

    The committee further notes that the Ministry of Law and Justice has been approached to advise states and Union Territories for installing CCTVs at district courts. The panel said that it would like to be apprised of the status of action taken by the states and Union Territories in this matter.

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    #Identify #cyber #hotspots #maintain #data #profile #cyber #crimes #Parliamentary #Panel

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • EV charging stations susceptible to cyber attacks: Gadkari

    EV charging stations susceptible to cyber attacks: Gadkari

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    New Delhi: Electric vehicle charging stations are also susceptible to cyber attacks and cyber security incidents like any other technological application, Parliament was informed on Thursday.

    In a written reply to Lok Sabha, Union Minister Nitin Gadkari said the Indian Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-In), which is mandated to track and monitor cyber security incidents in India, received reports of vulnerabilities in products and applications related to electric vehicle charging stations.

    “The government is fully cognizant and aware of various cyber security threats and is actively taking steps to combat the issue of hacking,” Gadkari said.

    He said as per the information reported to and tracked by CERT-In, the number of cyber security incidents during 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021 and 2022 is 2,08,456; 3,94,499; 11,58,208; 14,02,809 and 13,91,457, respectively.

    Replying to a separate query, the road transport and highways minister said Rs 147 lakh was disbursed as compensation to victims of hit-and-run cases in current fiscal year till February.

    The ministry has notified the Compensation to Victims of Hit and Run Motor Accidents Scheme, 2022.

    It provides for increased compensation to victims of hit-and-run accidents, Rs 50,000 (in case of grievous injury) and Rs 2,00,000 (in case of death) including detailed procedure for availing this compensation.

    Replying to another question, Gadkari said the ministry has set a higher target of 12,200 km for construction of National Highways during current financial year as compared to previous three financial years.

    “The target of construction of NHs for financial year 2023-24 has not yet been finalized,” he added.

    The minister informed that there are 19 projects costing Rs 21,864 crore which are delayed due to delays in land acquisition.

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    #charging #stations #susceptible #cyber #attacks #Gadkari

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Cyber Police Organizes Awareness Programme in Srinagar; Over 100 Stolen Mobile-phones Handed Over To Rightful Owners

    Cyber Police Organizes Awareness Programme in Srinagar; Over 100 Stolen Mobile-phones Handed Over To Rightful Owners

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    Rehan Qayoom Mir

    Srinagar, Mar 11 (GNS): As the world becomes increasingly digitized, the threat of cybercrime looms larger than ever before and in an effort to educate and inform the public about the dangers of Cybercrime, the Cyber police in Srinagar organized a special cyber awareness program under the supervision of SP Cyber Ifhtikar Talib at the Cyber Police Station here on Saturday.

    The program was designed to provide attendees with a comprehensive understanding of various types of cybercrime, including phishing, identity theft, and online fraud.

    As the event drew to a close, participants expressed their gratitude to the police for organizing such an informative and impactful program. Many pledged to take the lessons learned at the event and apply them in their daily lives, helping to create a safer and more secure digital landscape for all.

    Talking to media on the sidelines of the Cyber Awareness Program, SP Cyber Police Kashmir, as per GNS, said, they celebrated Thana Divas at the Cyber Police Station, just like they do every year at every police station across the country.

    “This day is dedicated to honoring the hard work and dedication of the police force who work tirelessly to ensure the safety and security of our society”, he said.

    “During the event, we returned more than 100 mobile-phones that we had recovered over the past few months. It was a proud moment for us to see the smile on people’s faces when they received their lost phones back,” he said, adding that this also shows the efficiency and commitment of our police force in tracking down stolen or lost items and returning them to their rightful owners.

    “However, the primary objective behind this Thana Divas event was to raise awareness among people about the dangers of cybercrime, with the increasing use of technology in our daily lives, the risk of falling victim to cybercrime has become more significant than ever before”, he said adding “We want to ensure that people are aware of the potential threats and are equipped with the knowledge and skills to protect themselves from such threats.

    “For this purpose, we had organized various awareness programs throughout the day, which included interactive sessions and workshops on cybersecurity. We also had experts and professionals from the industry who shared their experiences and insights on how to stay safe in the online world,” he added.

    “Overall, the Thana Divas event was a great success, and we hope that it will have a positive impact on society and people will be more aware and cautious when it comes to cybersecurity”, he further said. (GNS)

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    #Cyber #Police #Organizes #Awareness #Programme #Srinagar #Stolen #Mobilephones #Handed #Rightful #Owners

    ( With inputs from : thegnskashmir.com )

  • Telangana education council to introduce cyber security course for UGs

    Telangana education council to introduce cyber security course for UGs

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    Hyderabad: Telangana State Council of Higher Education (TSCHE) has announced that all the universities in the state offering undergraduate courses will also be incorporating cyber security courses from the next academic year.

    Designed and developed by experts from Osmania University and NALSAR University of Law, the course will be availed by the students while they pursue BSc or BA.

    TSCHE chairman Prof. R Limbadri chaired a meeting with the revenue principal, commissioner of technical and collegiate education Navin Mittal and vice chancellors of six conventional universities on Thursday.

    Convening the meeting, Prof. Limbadri said, “Not just creating awareness on the cybercrimes, the new cyber security course will help students with employability opportunities.”

    Apart from cyber security, the university will also be offering BSc (Honours) in Computer Science as a major and artificial intelligence and machine learning as minor subjects from the next academic year.

    Another decision was that private affiliated degree colleges will be granted generic affiliation instead of course-wise affiliation from the next academic year.

    This meant all the BSc Life Sciences or Physical Sciences will be given a single affiliation instead of course-wise as is being done now. The affiliation process will be through the university management system.

    During the meeting, officials reviewed the bucket system that enables students to choose their subject as per their interest.

    TSCHE encourages NAAC grading in UG institutions

    TSCHE on Thursday further decided to encourage all higher educational institutions to go for National Assessment and Accreditation Council (NAAC) grading.

    A seed fund of Rs 1 lakh to the college desirous, will be provided by the council to go for the grading.

    To implement the new initiative, the council will reportedly hold workshops and seminars with resource persons from the NAAC Bangalore on creating awareness of the grading system.

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    #Telangana #education #council #introduce #cyber #security #UGs

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Ukraine gears up for new phase of cyber war with Russia

    Ukraine gears up for new phase of cyber war with Russia

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    russia ukraine war 03844

    “We’re just sort of bracing for what comes next and hoping that we can help,” Roncone said.

    A renewed cyber offensive could also expand the war into regions of Ukraine that Russia has been unable to take with physical force, deepening the conflict even as Kyiv bolsters its armies with new weaponry from NATO allies. Major attacks could even spill over into NATO allies.

    Ukraine has done better than expected so far. While the Russian government and cyber criminal groups repeatedly attacked Ukraine through everything from government agencies to television stations to energy substations in 2022, Ukraine thwarted many of those and was able to recover from others quickly.

    “They were better prepared, more resilient, more prepared to get networks that were successfully attacked back up and running quickly,” said Tom Burt, Microsoft’s corporate vice president of customer security and trust.

    And fears that Russia would take down Ukraine’s energy grid or shut down military communications didn’t come to pass.

    But Russia has now had months to prepare, learn and reconsider its strategy.

    In February of 2022, Russian cyber forces didn’t have a lot of time to carry out sophisticated attacks, said Mark Montgomery, senior fellow on Cyber and Technology Innovation at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies.

    “Russian forces had the same level of warning about the invasion that those outside Putin’s inner circle had,” he said. “They had no time to plan — and they thought the war would be over soon anyway.”

    In the ensuing months, Russian hackers resorted to attacks that were less sophisticated and easier to launch, such as crude data-destroying “wiper” attacks and distributed denial-of-service attacks, which overwhelm servers until they temporarily crash, said Ciaran Martin, former CEO of the U.K.’s National Cyber Security Centre and current Paladin Capital Group managing director. Martin described the attacks as “improvised, fast paced … quite harassing attacks on the Ukrainian infrastructure.”

    Russia’s struggles throughout the year may have resulted from a failure to properly staff or train its cyber forces, said Jon Bateman, a senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

    But as the war continues, Russia has time to adapt, Bateman said.

    Russia could compensate for those shortcomings with “short bursts of intense [cyber] fires.” Timed right and properly coordinated with kinetic attacks — an admittedly tall order, qualified Bateman — “cyber operations could be really consequential.”

    With added time Russia could also be planning more sophisticated attacks.

    “I’d love to say we’re completely out of the woods, but I still have memories of the NotPetya attack years ago, and it’s not like they’ve stopped,” Senate Intelligence Committee Chair Mark Warner (D-Va.) said in an interview. He was referring to a 2017 Russian attack that used sophisticated malware to tunnel into Ukrainian networks across multiple industries and government agencies and caused an estimated $10 billion in damages worldwide.

    And as Russia gets further backed into a corner, it may be less concerned in 2023 that a cyberattack would end up affecting countries outside Ukraine and prompt them to provide more military support to Kyiv.

    Russia learned in 2017 that an attack targeted at Ukraine could spill into other countries, when the NotPetya hack spread to computer systems worldwide.That experience might have encouraged Russia to tightly control its digital offensive in the first year of the warr, said Christopher Ahlberg, CEO of Recorded Future.

    “Why would he want to get NATO involved, if he’s invading a specific country?” Ahlberg said.

    Now NATO is committing itself further in Ukraine. In recent weeks, alliance members have agreed to send main battle tanks to Kyiv — a threshold that seemed unthinkable at the war’s outset — and they are now weighing sending advanced fighter aircraft. And on Friday, the one year anniversary of the war, the U.S. announced an additional $2 billion tranche of long-term security assistance to Ukraine that will include ammunition and high-tech drones.

    That said, Ukraine’s cyber defenses have held strong against an onslaught from Russia that is much bigger than many realized. Dutch intelligence disclosed this week that there have been many more Russian cyberattacks against NATO and Ukraine than have been made public — and that Ukraine has largely fended those off.

    Still, officials in both the U.S. and Ukraine warn that success so far at blocking attacks shouldn’t be seen as evidence the threat is handled.

    “We should not take our shields down,” Jen Easterly, director of the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, told reporters this month. “It is very unpredictable what is going on in that space.”

    “We can say one thing for sure, for certain, that we won’t have fewer attacks this year,” Yurii Shchyhol, Ukraine’s top cybersecurity official, told POLITICO in January.

    A year into the war, many officials have far more confidence in Kyiv’s ability to blunt Russian cyber attacks than they did before Russia invaded.

    But knowing how much work went into securing Ukrainian networks, Microsoft’s Burt said cyberattacks — Russian or otherwise — could have a game-changing impact in future conflicts.

    “Over history, when you’ve seen a new form of weapon deployed in a conflict, what you tend to see is that in the next major conflict that form of weaponry has been significantly evolved and advanced and has become more destructive,” he said.

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    #Ukraine #gears #phase #cyber #war #Russia
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )