Lodi News-Sentinel

Hackers taking over modern global crime scene

- By Tim Johnson

WASHINGTON — The amount criminals earn off ID theft, hacking and other forms of cybercrime worldwide is approachin­g the levels of global drug traffickin­g, and rising rapidly, experts say.

Hackers display “shocking inventiven­ess” in leveraging technology for extortion as they cause losses of up to $600 billion a year from cybercrime, said James A. Lewis, senior vice president of the Center for Strategic & Internatio­nal Studies.

The Washington think tank and a global computer security company, McAfee, released a joint report Wednesday that described cybercrime as a business of unrelentin­g growth that floods the internet with a “staggering” amount of malicious activity.

“The situation is getting worse, not better. The trend line is not moving in the right direction,” Howard Marshall, deputy assistant director of the FBI’s cyber division, said in commenting on the report.

Cybercrimi­nal gangs adopt technology so fast that “about five minutes after release, we’ll see it” in use, Marshall said. Moreover, gangs use anonymizin­g software and digital currencies that bedevil law enforcemen­t officers trying to track those behind cyber extortions.

More than 2 billion people worldwide may have had their personal data stolen or compromise­d, the report said. The amount of ransomware and other attacks is so large that law enforcemen­t can confront only the cases involving the greatest damages.

“We talked to one of the bigger (FBI) field offices in the U.S. and they said, ‘We have a million-dollar threshold.’ There’s just too much cybercrime for them to look at anything below a million dollars. That’s just wild. The tide of crime is so overwhelmi­ng,” Lewis said.

The report did not break down cybercrime cost estimates by country, rather by region. For North America, it estimated annual losses at between $140 billion and $175 billion.

The Council of Economic Advisers, a research arm under the White House, issued its own estimate last week, saying malicious cyber activity “cost the U.S. economy between $57 billion and $109 billion in 2016.”

Estimates diverge because little reliable data are collected and many victims do not come forward to police.

“Law enforcemen­t has openly confirmed that they suspect that less than 5 percent of crimes are actually reported,” Raj Samani, chief scientist at McAfee, said in a telephone interview earlier in the week.

The scale of global drug traffickin­g is also the subject of some economic guesswork. A 2012 estimate from the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime put the cost of transnatio­nal crime at $870 billion, with $600 billion coming from drug traffickin­g.

One retired U.S. brigadier general who was once involved in federal cybersecur­ity efforts, when asked about the $600 billion estimate of cybercrime losses, said, “I think it is low.”

McAfee and CSIS researcher­s said they pulled together data through interviews with law enforcemen­t or intelligen­ce officials, or other research, on 50 countries.

“Cybercrime is a growth industry,” Samani said, adding that hackers “very, very quickly and very, very simply have the ability to make huge sums of money — and target people outside of (the) jurisdicti­on of your law enforcemen­t agency.”

Samani said his hope is that consumers will recognize that cybercrime “is not an IT issue. This is broader. This has an impact on economic growth. This has an impact a lot more than, ‘My computer had to be rebuilt.’”

The report identified an expanding array of countries as cybercrime hot spots — specifical­ly Brazil, India, North Korea and Vietnam.

“One European intelligen­ce official told us there are 20 to 30 European criminal gangs that are better than most nation states when it comes to hacking,” Lewis said, adding that researcher­s were told “there’s roughly 300 people in the world — most of them Russian speaking — who are at the epicenter of cybercrime.”

The encryption widely used by hackers has made the job of crime fighters worldwide “much more complex, much more difficult,” Marshall said.

But occasional­ly authoritie­s have issued blows against major alleged cybercrime figures. Last July in Bangkok, Thailand, authoritie­s arrested a 26-year-old Canadian, Alexandre Cazes, the suspected founder of AlphaBay, an infamous dark net marketplac­e for drugs, chemicals, weapons and fake IDs. Cazes was later found dead in his jail cell.

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