Khaleej Times

Hackers hit Russian bank customers, planned internatio­nal cyber attacks

- Jack Stubbs

moscow — Russian cyber criminals used malware planted on Android mobile devices to steal from domestic bank customers and were planning to target European lenders before their arrest, investigat­ors and sources with knowledge of the case told Reuters.

Their campaign raised a relatively small sum by cyber-crime standards — more than 50 million roubles ($892,000) — but they had also obtained more sophistica­ted malicious software for a modest monthly fee to go after the clients of banks in France and possibly a range of other western nations.

The gang members tricked the Russian banks’ customers into downloadin­g malware via fake mobile banking applicatio­ns, as well as via pornograph­y and e-commerce programmes, according to a report compiled by cyber security firm Group-IB which investigat­ed the attack with the Russian Interior Ministry. The criminals — 16 suspects were arrested by Russian law enforcemen­t authoritie­s in November last year — infected more than a million smartphone­s in Russia, on average compromisi­ng 3,500 devices a day, Group-IB said.

The hackers targeted customers of state lender Sberbank, and also stole money from accounts at Alfa Bank and online payments company Qiwi, exploiting weaknesses in the companies’ SMS text message transfer services, said two people with direct knowledge of the case.

Although operating only in Russia before their arrest, they had developed plans to target large European banks including French lenders Credit Agricole, BNP Paribas and Societe General, Group-IB said. A BNP Paribas spokeswoma­n said the bank could not confirm this informatio­n, but added that it “has a significan­t set of measures in place aimed at fighting cyber attacks on a daily basis”. Societe General and Credit Agricole declined comment.

The gang, which was called “Cron” after the malware it used, did not steal any funds from customers of the three French banks. However, it exploited the bank service in Russia that allows users to transfer small sums to other accounts by sending an SMS message.

Having infected the users’ phones, the gang sent SMS messages from those devices instructin­g the banks to transfer money to the hackers’ own accounts.

The findings illustrate the dangers of using SMS messages for mobile banking, a method favoured in emerging countries with less advanced internet infrastruc­ture, said Lukas Stefanko, a malware researcher at cyber security firm ESET in Slovakia. —

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? The cybercrimi­nals tricked the banks’ customers into downloadin­g malware through fake mobile banking applicatio­ns.
— Bloomberg The cybercrimi­nals tricked the banks’ customers into downloadin­g malware through fake mobile banking applicatio­ns.

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