A student from Girona set up his Cybercrime Office at home. His mistake was to show off his robberies on the Internet

A joint operation of Mossos d’Esquadra and National Police He has arrested a hacker in Roses (Girona) Responsible for several cyber attacks operating from a sophisticated technological network … in their own home. Why is it important. The detainee had managed to configure a technological network complex using anonymous applications that allowed him to hide his trail while attacked financial institutions, private companies and public bodies. The researchers discovered that the hacker, a young computer student with very advanced knowledge, stole personal databases of employees and clients, as well as confidential internal documents. Then he sold this information in forums of the Dark Web or published it without asking for anything in return. What has happened. The investigation started in May 2024, when the agents detected in a forum that someone presumed to have data from Spanish banks, a self -school and a public university. The same subject later claimed to have filtered the database of a Barcelona plumbing company. After an arduous discouragement of desanimization, the researchers located Roses’s address from where the attacks were launched. The subsequent investigations identified the inhabitants of the house, including the young computer student. In detail. During the record they seized: A laptop. A dozen mobile phones. Several hard drives. More than thirty SIM cards. Several bank cards in the name of different people. The detainee made available to the Court of Guard of Figueres for a crime of discovery and revelation of secrets. And now what. The investigation remains active to locate new victims and clarify all the scams that this person may have committed using stolen data to the affected entities. Outstanding image | Mossos d’Esquadra In Xataka | We visited the National CNI cryptological center: here is the epicenter of Spanish cybersecurity

There is a person who knows more than anyone in the world about password robberies. And they just steal his

Troy hunt It has been for years warning us of the dangers of the passwords. It happened so often that it ended up turning those warnings In a project that has become a reference: Have I Been Pwned. And despite everything he knows, he has just fallen into a theft of credentials with the most common method of all: A Phishing email. Can happen to anyone. Hunt had in his blog how it fell into a very well elaborate trap: a phishing email that pretended to come from Mailchimpthe platform you use to distribute your newsletter. In the notice he was informed that he had received a spam complaint and that his shipping privileges in the service would be restricted. To solve it, yes, I could click on a button with a link. Why did that phishing work? As this expert explained, “I have received a ton of similar messages that I have always identified quickly”, but there was a critical factor that played against him: the moment in which he received it and read it. Hunt had Jet Lag and was very tired when he received the message, and did not think enough that something was not right. Difficult indications to identify. After clicking on the link, Hunt also noticed how his password manager did not autocomplete the details of his account (user and passwords, usually). This could have been an indication that the domain from which those credentials were requested was suspicious, but he himself indicated that many platforms record you in a domain (which the password manager keeps) and then authenticate you in another. Theft of their subscribers. Phishing’s attack caused the attackers to steal 16,000 records that belong to people who subscribed but also that he had already discharged from his Newsletter. Mailchimp keeps those registers for some reason. In these data, email, IPS and latitude and length addresses are included, however they do not point to the subscriber location. He has also been “Pwned”. The creator of the Have Ien Pwned site ended up adding the theft of his data to the database he uses on this platform, as was of rigor. As he pointed out in his blog, not to do it “it would have been a hypocrisy.” He also had the success of telling what had happened to him right away. If a message is super urgent, suspect. Phishing attacks usually always take advantage of being written with an urgency tone or message. If you don’t act, they try to tell you, something bad can happen to you. That is precisely why in these messages it is to try to keep the head cold and clear and not act instinctively or immediately. It is probably the great lesson that can be taken from this event. Passkeys help. Traditional passwords remain a potential threat to phishing attacks, but there is a method that helps us avoid that threat in particular: Passkeys or Paso Keyswhich make use of safe biometry. Its implementation, yes, is quite fragmentedbut we deposit confidence in a passkeys provider (such as Google either Applefor example) are undoubtedly An important element To add a remarkable safety layer, as well as the authentications in two steps (2FA) have been so far. Image | Saksham Choudhary In Xataka | There are users who pass from passwords. And they go to “I forgot my password” to generate them again and again

Four subjects arrested in Ohio for alleged robberies in athletes’ homes

The investigation of a series of high-profile property burglaries in Ohio led to the arrest of four men of Chilean nationality, who face multiple charges related to organized criminal activities. According to authorities, those detained would be linked to an organized crime network that targets multimillion-dollar residences, including alleged properties of professional athletes. The suspects were arrested earlier this month in Fairborn, Ohio, after being found in a van with allegedly stolen items, including a Louisiana State University (LSU) jersey and a Cincinnati Bengals cap. These items were related to a burglary that occurred on December 9 at a home near Cincinnati. The same day, Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow’s home was ransacked while he and his team were playing in Dallas. Although court documents do not confirm a direct connection between those arrested and the burglary at Burrow’s home, the incident reinforces the hypothesis that professional athletes could be targets of these criminal gangs. Thieves with a pattern According to the FBI, South American organized crime groups, including gangs formed by Chilean citizens, are using social media and other sources of information to identify and track high-profile athletes. This warning had already been issued to the NFL, NBA and NHL leagues in December. Among the confirmed victims of these thefts are stars such as Patrick Mahomes and Travis Kelce, players for the Kansas City Chiefs in the NFL, as well as Luka Doncic (Dallas Mavericks) and Mike Conley Jr. (Minnesota Timberwolves) in the NBA. The four arrested in Ohio face charges of: Engage in a pattern of corrupt activity. Be part of a criminal gang. Possession of criminal tools. In addition, authorities found devices used to break windows, false identifications, and found that the detainees were in the country illegally or had exceeded their permits. An investigation in progress Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost’s office said investigations continue, without offering further details about possible links to other thefts at athletes’ property. Keep reading: – Luka Doncic’s house in Dallas is robbed and thousands of dollars are taken

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