Newsletters

Written content from the Risky Business Media team

Risky Bulletin: Meta disrupts Mexican cartels

Presented by

Catalin Cimpanu
Catalin Cimpanu

News Editor

Meta's security team has suspended thousands of accounts last year that were tied to Mexican and other Latin American drug cartels.

The Facebook and Instagram accounts were used to recruit youth for drug trafficking and drug dealing, to advertise drugs, and to organize violence and extortion operations.

Meta says it used AI to detect the coded language typically used by cartels and also to identify photos of drugs posted on its platforms. Human reviewers also confirmed the findings before accounts were removed.

Risky Bulletin: Another residential proxy provider falls as authorities continue crackdowns

Presented by

Catalin Cimpanu
Catalin Cimpanu

News Editor

American and European law enforcement agencies have seized the infrastructure of a residential proxy provider named SocksEscort; the latest of such a crackdown against proxy providers over the past years.

The service had been running since 2021 and rented access to more than 369,000 different IP addresses across its lifetime.

According to the FBI, Europol, and Dutch Police, SocksEscort was a front for a malware operation that infected modems and home routers. Lumen's Black Lotus Labs linked it to a botnet it discovered in 2023, named AVRecon.

Srsly Risky Biz: Trump's Cyber Strategy… Great, Amazing, The Best Yet

Presented by

Tom Uren
Tom Uren

Policy & Intelligence

President Donald Trump's Cyber Strategy contains an ambitious array of worthwhile goals. The administration's actions over the past year, however, directly undermine many of them, barring one. It raises the question: Can aggressive offensive cyber action compensate for lukewarm defensive efforts?

The strategy, released last Friday, one-ups the Biden era equivalent, at least superficially. Rather than five pillars, this one has six:

The strategy's overall vibe is dominated by that first pillar: "Shape Adversary Behaviour". President Trump's foreword describes using cyber power for "disrupting and disorienting our adversaries". He concludes that "American Power will finally stand up in cyberspace". 

Risky Bulletin: New White House EO prioritizes fight against scams and cybercrime

Presented by

Catalin Cimpanu
Catalin Cimpanu

News Editor

US President Donald Trump signed a new executive order on Friday directing federal agencies to prioritize a crackdown against foreign scam operations and predatory forms of cybercrime.

Scam-related crimes, such as business email compromise and investment fraud, have been at the top of the FBI's list of most damaging forms of cybercrime for over half-a-decade.

In 2024 alone, Americans lost $12.5 billion to cyber-enabled fraud schemes, a figure that will likely be surpassed when the 2025 numbers come out in April.

Risky Bulletin: Iranian hackers are scanning for security cameras to aid missile strikes

Presented by

Catalin Cimpanu
Catalin Cimpanu

News Editor

A sudden spike in scanning activity for internet-exposed security cameras has been recorded in Israel and countries across the Middle East. The activity has been traced back to a hacking group with ties to the Iranian government.

The scans spiked on Monday, when Iran launched missile and drone strikes in response to an Israeli and US military operation that bombed and killed its political leadership over the weekend.

Security firm Check Point says the scans targeted Hikvision and Dahua security cameras and included attempts to exploit old vulnerabilities. Scans targeted Israel, Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, the UAE, and Cyprus, the exact same countries where Iran carried out kinetic strikes.

Srsly Risky Biz: The Four Hour Cyber War on Iran

Presented by

Tom Uren
Tom Uren

Policy & Intelligence

The US-Israeli attack on Iran shows how cyber operations help achieve military goals when aggressors have cyber dominance. But it also highlights the small window of opportunity for them to have a significant impact once war kicks off.

At a press briefing on Monday, Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Dan Caine said US Cyber Command was involved in "coordinated space and cyber operations [that] effectively disrupted communications and sensor networks… leaving the adversary without the ability to see, coordinate or respond effectively".

The overall goal, he said, was to "disrupt, disorient and confuse the enemy". 

Risky Bulletin: Cyber Command conducted cyberattacks ahead of Iran strikes

Presented by

Catalin Cimpanu
Catalin Cimpanu

News Editor

The Pentagon says that US Cyber Command carried out cyber operations that disrupted Iranian defenses ahead of a joint US-Israeli military operation over the last weekend.

"The first movers were US CyberCom and US SpaceCom, layering non-kinetic effects, disrupting and degrading and blinding Iran's ability to see, communicate, and respond," Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Dan Caine said in a press conference on Monday.

"Coordinated space and cyber operations effectively disrupted communications and sensor networks across the area of responsibility, leaving the adversary without the ability to see, coordinate, or respond effectively," he added.

Risky Bulletin: LLMs can deanonymize internet users based on their past comments

Presented by

Catalin Cimpanu
Catalin Cimpanu

News Editor

A team of academics has developed large language models (LLMs) that can deanonymize internet users based on past comments or other digital clues they have left behind.

The new method works even if targets use different pseudonyms across multiple platforms. It can link real identities to hidden accounts and online activity, and vice versa.

The LLMs basically work by analyzing past activity and creating user profiles. Once enough data points are available, connections can be made between similar profiles based on shared vocabulary and other clues revealed online, such as locations, hobbies, age, and so on.

Risky Bulletin: Russian man investigated for extorting Conti ransomware group

Presented by

Catalin Cimpanu
Catalin Cimpanu

News Editor

Russian authorities have arrested a Moscow resident for posing as an FSB intelligence officer to extort and demand payments from members of the Conti ransomware group.

Ruslan Satuchin was detained in October of last year and has remained in custody after authorities extended his arrest warrant in December.

According to Russian news outlet RBC, the suspect contacted a Conti member in September of 2022, claiming he could prevent the FSB from investigating them for a bribe.