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posted by Fnord666 on Friday July 03 2020, @05:59AM   Printer-friendly
from the architecturally-impaired dept.

After two months of monitoring, a major encrypted criminal chat network in Europe has been shut down, resulting in over 800 arrests so far.

An estimated 60,000 people, among them up to 10,000 in Britain, subscribed to France-based EncroChat, which has now been taken down.

The system operated on customised Android phones and, according to its website, provided "worry-free secure communications".

Customers had access to features such as self-destructing messages that deleted from the recipient's device after a certain length of time.

There was also panic wipe, where all the data on the device could be deleted by entering a four-digit code from the lock-screen.

According to BBC technology reporter David Molloy

EncroChat sold encrypted phones with a guarantee of anonymity, with a range of special features to remove identifying information. The phones themselves cost roughly £900 (€1,000) each, with a subscription costing £1,350 (€1,500) for six months.

Europol said that French police had discovered some of EncroChat's servers were located in the country, and that it was possible to put a "technical device" in place to access the messages.

In June, rumours began to swirl about EncroChat being compromised by law enforcement.

The Netherlands' National Police said that users began to throw away their phones once the company became aware that messages were being intercepted - "but it was too late".

Police had already intercepted millions of messages, some of which have been acted on already - and others that may be used in the future.

England's National Crime Agency (NCA), roughly comparable to the Federal Bureau of Investigation in the United States, stated that dozens of organized crime groups were shut down primarily across London and Northwestern England.

Details on the method used to breach the encrypted network have not been described in detail other than as "state of the art cyber technology."


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 03 2020, @09:30AM (2 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 03 2020, @09:30AM (#1015707)

    The stupid part of these criminals were that they all flocked to the same messaging system (without understanding how it works), for ALL their message exchange. People expect encryption during communication to easy, but this shows there are many levels where things could go wrong.

    A few weeks back there was some message in the news with lots of people getting arrested by trying to move lots of cash across borders (due to corona restrictions) showing that the banking system of the cryminal world was getting messed up by the corona restrictions. It surprises me that they had this system in place, but are neglecting their IT infrastructure.

    On a funny note... I read this morning an interview with an attourney on this subject who told his clients to "not to trust this pgp bullshit".

  • (Score: 1, Touché) by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 03 2020, @08:14PM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 03 2020, @08:14PM (#1015835)

    The stupid part of these criminals were that they all flocked to the same messaging system (without understanding how it works)

    They're criminals, why would you assume intelligence?

    • (Score: 2) by Appalbarry on Saturday July 04 2020, @12:58AM

      by Appalbarry (66) on Saturday July 04 2020, @12:58AM (#1015939) Journal

      Only the stupid ones get caught. By definition you'll never catch the most successful criminals.