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United States Businesses Privacy Security

US Indicts Ukrainian Hackers Who Stole Millions of Credit and Debit Card Numbers (reuters.com) 22

Three Ukrainians associated with the hacking group FIN7 have been arrested in Europe in connection with hacks of more than 100 U.S. companies that led to tens of millions of dollars in losses, Reuters reported Wednesday, citing U.S. officials and court documents. From the report: Fin7 has been linked to breaches affecting hotels bearing the name of U.S. President Donald Trump, Whole Foods, Chipotle, Saks Fifth Avenue and Lord & Taylor, according to cyber security firm Trend Micro. The suspects, Fedir Hladyr, Dmytro Fedorov and Andrii Kolpakov, were arrested in Europe between January and June of this year, the Justice Department said on Wednesday. Hladyr is in U.S. custody and U.S. authorities are seeking extradition of the other two, the department said. The three were arrested in connection with computer hacks to steal customer payment card data and other information from more than 100 U.S. companies, the department said.
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US Indicts Ukrainian Hackers Who Stole Millions of Credit and Debit Card Numbers

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  • Three Ukrainians associated with the hacking group FIN7 have been arrested in Europe in connection with hacks of more than 100 U.S. companies that led to tens of millions of dollars in losses...

    I wonder how the USA was able to infer that these Ukrainians weren't government backed.

    In other words, question is: If these were Russians would the USA have gone for them [directly] or directly accused the Russian government like it has done in the no-so-distant past?

    On a side note, doesn't this show that our systems are inherently weak ?

    • I wonder how the USA was able to infer that these Ukrainians weren't government backed.

      In other words, question is: If these were Russians would the USA have gone for them [directly] or directly accused the Russian government like it has done in the no-so-distant past?

      Well, go easy on them - at least they found a Trump connection! After all, if they hacked a hotel with his name on it, that proves he was "colluding" with them.

    • On a side note, doesn't this show that our systems are inherently weak ?

      Duh. Any system based on the same information being both secret and widely shared is inherently weak.

      The solution is to implement the fixes that the rest of the world has already done.

      Note that the Ukrainians only stole American CC #s.

    • Stealing money anonymously is hard, because you have to have a real-world end point for that money. In the case of stolen credit cards, it can be easy to trace where and when these transactions occurred. If they were selling the CC information itself, then it might be the buyer who was compromised.

      IOW, hacking to steal money is a lot harder to keep anonymous, than hacking to steal information. Once you know the individuals involved, it's much easier to spy on them and see whether they are working in a cri
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion

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