Tag: crypto fraud

Pastor Charged with Cryptocurrency Scam

Washington-based Pastor Francier Obando Pinillo has been charged for his involvement in “Solano Fi,” a fraudulent cryptocurrency investment business that Pinillo claims “came to him in a dream.” A pastor in a church based in Pasco, Washington, Pinillo allegedly took advantage of his position to sway members of the congregation to invest in Solano Fi, defrauding over a thousand victims of millions of dollars in what he claimed was a “safe and guaranteed investment.” “Fraudulent investment schemes are not new, but cryptocurrency scams are a new way fraudsters take money from hardworking, honest people,” states US Attorney Vanessa Waldref. The landmark case illustrates how cryptocurrency scams have now become mainstream. Fraudulent cryptocurrency schemes have previously been viewed as the province of highly organized hostile nation-state-backed cybercriminals and shadowy ‘market makers”. But the Pinillo case illustrates how even relatively unskilled crooks are now capable of preying on the greed of unsuspecting investors.

4 Min Read

Ransomware drives corporate cyber-crime

Cybercriminals are getting greedier. According to Google subsidiary Mandiant’s M-Trends 2024 Special Report, the proportion of financially motivated intrusions grew from more than a quarter of all investigations (26 percent) in 2022 to over a third (36 percent) in 2023. Ransomware-related intrusions represented almost two-thirds of financially motivated intrusions and 23 percent of all 2023 intrusions; the remaining financially motivated intrusions included business email compromise (BEC) fraud and cryptocurrency theft. In 70 percent of cases, organizations learned of ransomware-related intrusions from external sources. In three-quarters of those cases, organizations were notified of a ransomware incident by an attacker ransom message. The remaining quarter came from external partners, such as law enforcement or cybersecurity companies. “This is consistent with the extortion business model in which attackers intentionally and abruptly notify organizations of a ransomware intrusion and demand payment,” says Mandiant.

3 Min Read

Cyber Consultant Claims Universities are More Vulnerable to Cyber Attacks – April 8th

Highlighting the severity of the University of Winnipeg data breach, Cybersecurity consultant Kathy Knight asserts that the education sector is one of the most vulnerable to cyber attacks, potentially leading to significant data loss and privacy breaches. “The thing about universities is they’re very big, complex institutions … and they collect a lot of information and data that is very attractive to cyber criminals. So that puts them really, at the top of the list, in terms of attack targets,” she said.

2 Min Read

‘Pig Butchering’ crypto-fraudsters net billions

‘Pig Butchering’, a new and particularly mean and ruthless form of cryptocurrency fraud that originated in China, has evolved into a global scourge. Sha zhu pan, which translates as “pig-butchering”, uses sophisticated fraudulent decentralized finance (DeFi) applications to bypass most of the defenses provided by mobile device vendors. WhatsApp is the preferred platform for targets outside China; Telegram is also used, as is Skype. According to cybersecurity firm Sophos: “Originating in China at the beginning of the COVID pandemic, ‘pig butchering’ scams have expanded globally ever since, becoming a multi-billion-dollar fraud phenomenon.”

4 Min Read

Blockchains lose $1.8 billion to cybercrime

Web 3.0, the blockchain version of the traditional internet that hosts decentralized blockchain crypto-currencies, lost over US$1.8 billion in 2023 to cybercrime. Newly released findings from cybersecurity firm Certik’s latest Hack3D Annual Report cast a pall over the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)’s much-anticipated approval of up to a dozen Bitcoin ETFs (exchange-traded funds) on Wednesday. It will also cast a long shadow over the hoped-for institutional acceptance of crypto-currencies by influential financial entities, including Swift, the Hong Kong Monetary Authority, and the Australia and New Zealand Banking Group (ANZ). In the second half of last year, the SEC scrutinized a series of proposals, notably extending review periods for Bitcoin ETF applications from major firms like BlackRock, ARK, and Fidelity.

4 Min Read