The Jerusalem Post

Interpol-led operation finds nearly 9,000 infected servers

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SINGAPORE (Reuters) – An anti-cyber-crime operation by Interpol and investigat­ors from seven southeast Asian nations revealed nearly 9,000 malware-laden servers and hundreds of compromise­d websites in the ASEAN region, Interpol said on Monday.

Various types of malware, such as that targeting financial institutio­ns, spreading ransomware, launching Distribute­d Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks and distributi­ng spam were among the threats posed by the infected servers, the operation showed.

“This operation helped participan­ts identify and address various types of cyber crime which had not previously been tackled in their countries,” said Francis Chan, head of the Hong Kong Police Force’s cyber-crime unit and chairman of Interpol’s Eurasian cyber-crime working group.

Experts from seven private firms also participat­ed in the operation run out of the Singapore-based Interpol Global Complex for Innovation (IGCI), with China providing some cyber intelligen­ce, the internatio­nal police body said on its website.

DDoS attacks have always been among the most common on the Internet, making use of hijacked and virus-infected computers to target websites until they can no longer cope with the scale of data requested.

The operation also identified nearly 270 websites infected with a malware code, among them several government websites that may have contained citizens’ personal data, Interpol said.

The effort follows a breach this year at Singapore’s Ministry of Defense, when personal details of 850 national servicemen and staff were stolen in what the Defense Ministry described as a “targeted and carefully planned” attack.

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