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posted by Fnord666 on Thursday September 26 2019, @01:35PM   Printer-friendly
from the state-sponsored-hacking? dept.

Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:

A Russian national has admitted to carrying out the largest-known computer hack on a US bank. His 2014 breach of JPMorgan Chase generated hundreds of millions of dollars in illicit revenue and stole the data of more than 80 million JPMorgan clients.

Andrei Tyurin, 35, whose last name is also spelled Tiurin, also pleaded guilty to hacks against other US financial institutions, brokerage firms, and other companies. In all, he pleaded guilty in federal court to computer intrusion, wire fraud, bank fraud, and illegal online gambling as part of a securities-fraud scheme carried out by co-conspirators.

Prosecutors said that the from 2012 to mid-2015, Tyurin carried out a massive computer-hacking campaign that stole data belonging to more than 100 million customers of the targeted companies. The 2014 intrusion on JPMorgan alone resulted in the theft of more than 80 million customer records, making it the largest—or at least one of the largest—data hacks against a US financial institution.

Tyurin also carried out attacks on numerous US and foreign companies to further other criminal enterprises operated by Shalon and other co-conspirators. Those enterprises included unlawful Internet gambling businesses and international payment processors.

"Nearly all of these illegal businesses, like the securities-market manipulation schemes, exploited the fruits of Tyurin's computer-hacking campaigns," prosecutors said in Monday's release. "Through these various criminal schemes, Tyurin, Shalon, and their co-conspirators obtained hundreds of millions of dollars in illicit proceeds."

[...] The sophistication and scale of the hacks led US investigators to initially suspect the campaign was sponsored by the Russian government or the government of another well-resourced country. Investigators eventually concluded the attacks were the work of a for-profit criminal enterprise.


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  • (Score: 2) by Freeman on Monday September 30 2019, @02:55PM (1 child)

    by Freeman (732) on Monday September 30 2019, @02:55PM (#900807) Journal

    Any number of reasons, greed and / or fear of death due to repercussions from leaving the organization or the like. Greed is usually a pretty big motivator all on it's own, though.

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    Joshua 1:9 "Be strong and of a good courage; be not afraid, neither be thou dismayed: for the Lord thy God is with thee"
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  • (Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Monday September 30 2019, @03:30PM

    by JoeMerchant (3937) on Monday September 30 2019, @03:30PM (#900816)

    As people I know enter their late 70s, I wonder what their accumulation of wealth activities are really for - to pass on to the children? Aren't there better things to give the kids, like breathable air, clean water, and edible fish in the oceans, instead of numbers on a balance sheet somewhere saying: you're more powerful than most other humans on the planet...?

    I mean, I get it, habits are hard to break - they've been striving for that big brass ring for six decades+, and they're finally getting closer to it, but... why bother now?

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