An Indian bank has lost nearly 944m rupees ($13.5m) after hackers withdrew the funds from ATMs around the world and made other fraudulent SWIFT transfers. . Pune-headquartered Cosmos Bank claimed the attackers first stole customer information by installing malware on the firm’s ATM server, before conducting the globally co-ordinated withdrawals in 28 countries on August 11. An alert from the FBI warned unnamed banks on Friday of an imminent “global Automated Teller Machine (ATM) cash-out scheme” but was unable to halt the sophisticated plot. The link for this article located at InfoSecurity is no longer available. . An Indian financial institution faced a $13.5 million loss from a sophisticated international ATM fraud, where cybercriminals infiltrated their server with malware. ATM Cash-Out Scheme, Financial Cyber Crime, Global Attack, Bank Security, Information Theft. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Attackers suspected of residing in Russia are raiding Swiss bank accounts with a multi-faceted attack that intercepts SMS tokens and changes domain name system settings, researchers have warned.. The attacks sported a clever implementation of malware that pointed victim machines to replica phishing bank sites when they attempt to access their accounts without triggering any warnings. That tactic was accomplished by malware that manipulated a victims' DNS settings and installed an SSL certificate for the phishing sites before wiping itself clean to remove evidence of infection. The link for this article located at The Register UK is no longer available. . Cybercriminals are taking advantage of weaknesses in Swiss banking systems using DNS spoofing to direct victims to fake webpages designed to steal sensitive financial data. Swiss Banks Cyber Attack, DNS Manipulation, Malware Phishing. . Dave Wreski
A COMPUTER hacker infected more than 2000 computers in Australia and overseas with a program to capture banking details, a court has heard.. Anthony Scott Harrison, 20, used the internet to teach himself hacking and programming skills to launch his attack last year but was caught when suspicious web activity was registered and tracked by federal police. Harrison also modified and sold software to allow others to infect computers, with his offending flowing from his obsession with the world of cyber fantasy. The link for this article located at Herald Sun AU is no longer available. The link for this article located at Herald Sun AU is no longer available. . Anthony Scott Harrison, 20, used the internet to teach himself hacking and programming skills to lau. computer, hacker, infected, computers, australia, overseas, program. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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