Hacking ring steals up to $1 billion from 100 international banks: report
Since 2013, the hackers have infiltrated more than 100 banks in 30 countries, security company Kaspersky Lab said in a new report. The attacks are unusual because they target the banks themselves rather than customers and their account information, experts said.
A
hacking ring has infiltrated more than 100 banks in 30 countries since
2013, according to Russian security company Kaspersky Lab.
NEW
YORK — A hacking ring has stolen up to $1 billion from banks around the
world in what would be one of the biggest banking breaches known, a
cybersecurity firm says in a report scheduled to be delivered Monday.
The
hackers have been active since at least the end of 2013 and infiltrated
more than 100 banks in 30 countries, according to Russian security
company Kaspersky Lab.
After
gaining access to banks' computers through phishing schemes and other
methods, they lurk for months to learn the banks' systems, taking screen
shots and even video of employees using their computers, the company
says.
Once
the hackers become familiar with the banks' operations, they use that
knowledge to steal money without raising suspicions, programming ATMs to
dispense money at specific times or setting up fake accounts and
transferring money into them, according to Kaspersky. The report is set
to be presented Monday at a security conference in Cancun, Mexico. It
was first reported by The New York Times.
The
hackers seem to limit their theft to about $10 million before moving on
to another bank, part of the reason why the fraud was not detected
earlier, Kaspersky principal security researcher Vicente Diaz said in a
telephone interview with The Associated Press.
The attacks are unusual because they target the banks themselves rather than customers and their account information, Diaz said.
The goal seems to be financial gain rather than espionage, he said.
"In
this case they are not interested in information. They're only
interested in the money," he said. "They're flexible and quite
aggressive and use any tool they find useful for doing whatever they
want to do."
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