‘Scareware’ Distributors Targeted
12 Nations Coordinate Anti-Cyber Crime Effort
06/22/11
One of the most widespread types of cyber scam being perpetrated against consumers these days involves โscarewareโโthose pop-up messages you see on your computer saying youโve got a virus and all you have to do to get rid of it is buy the antivirus software being advertised.
And if you donโt buy it? The pop-ups continue unabated, and in some instances, the scareware renders all of the information on your computer inaccessible.
Scareware is malicious software that poses as legitimate computer security software and claims to detect a variety of threats on the affected computer that do not actually exist. Users are then informed they must purchase the scareware in order to repair their computers and are barraged with aggressive and disruptive notifications until they supply their credit card number and pay up to $129 for the worthless scareware product. |
|---|
But today, the Department of Justice and the FBI announced โOperation Trident Tribunal,โ a coordinated, international law enforcement action that disrupted the activities of two international cyber crime rings involved in the sale of scareware. The groups are believed responsible for victimizing more than one million computer users and causing more than $74 million in total losses.
Scam #1: The FBIโs Seattle office began looking into a scareware scam, later attributed to a group based in Kyiv, Ukraine, that ultimately claimed an estimated 960,000 victims who lost a total of $72 million. Investigators discovered a variety of ruses used to infect computers with scareware, including consumers being directed to webpages featuring fake computer scans that instead downloaded malicious software. The Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) deployed more thanย 100 officers as it orchestrated this phase of the operation in conjunction with the German BKA, Latvian State Police, and Cyprus National Police. Results included the execution of numerous search warrants, subject interviews, and seized bank accounts and a server.
Scam #2: The FBIโs Minneapolis office initiated an investigation into an international criminal group using online advertising to spread its scareware product, a tactic known as โmalvertising.โ According to a U.S.ย federal indictment unsealed today,ย two individuals inย Latvia were charged with creating a phony advertising agency and claimingย to represent a hotel chain that wanted to purchase online advertising space on a Minneapolis newspaperโs website. After the ad was verified by the paper and posted, the defendants changed the adโs computer code so that visitors to the site became infected with a malicious software program that launched scareware on their computers. That scheme resulted in losses of aboutย $2 million to its victims.The Latvian State Police led this phase of the operation, with the SBU and Cyprus National Police.
| Highlights:ย – More than 1 million victims incurred over $74 million in actual losses;
– Two subjects arrested; – More than 40 computers, servers, and bank accounts seized; –ย 12 countries participating, including United States, Ukraine, Latvia, Germany, Netherlands, Cyprus, France, Sweden, Lithuania, Romania, Canada, and the United Kingdom. |
|---|
In a true reflection of the international nature of cyber crime, โTrident Tribunalโ was the result of significant cooperation among 12 nations: Ukraine, Latvia, Germany, Netherlands, Cyprus, France, Lithuania, Romania, Canada, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and the U.S. So far, the case has resulted in two arrests abroad, along with the seizure of more than 40 computers, servers, and bank accounts. Because of the magnitude of the schemes, law enforcement agencies here and abroad are continuing their investigative efforts.
How to spot scareware on your own computer:
- Scareware pop-ups may look like actual warnings from your system, but upon closer inspection, some elements arenโt fully functional. For instance, to appear authentic, you may see a list of reputable iconsโlike software companies or security publicationsโbut you canโt click through to go to those actual sites.
- Scareware pop-ups are hard to close, even after clicking on the โCloseโ or โXโ button.
- Fake antivirus products are designed to appear legitimate, with names such as Virus Shield, Antivirus, or VirusRemover.
And to avoid being victimized, make sure your computer is using legitimate, up-to-date antivirus software, which can help detect and remove fraudulent scareware products.
