City
Epaper

Hackers extort money in crypto, threatens to expose embarrassing & illicit content

By IANS | Published: July 13, 2023 4:50 PM

New Delhi, July 13 Email fraudsters are attempting to extort money from potential victims by threatening to release ...

Open in App

New Delhi, July 13 Email fraudsters are attempting to extort money from potential victims by threatening to release embarrassing or illicit material, targeting more than 10 work email accounts at a time, and making moderate payment demands -- around $1,000 in Bitcoin, a report said on Thursday.

According to cloud-enabled security solutions provider Barracuda Network, such tactics could help attackers to stay under the radar and avoid alerting potential victims, security teams and payment systems.

Researchers analysed 3,00,000 emails detected as blackmailing scams over a period of 12 months at Columbia University to understand the financial infrastructure attackers use for extortion emails.

"Extortion attacks need to be taken seriously by security teams, especially when they are targeting people through their work email accounts," said Nishant Taneja, Senior Director, Product Marketing, Email Protection at Barracuda.

According to the report, attackers were using 3,000 unique Bitcoin wallet addresses out of which 100 wallets appeared in 80 per cent of the extortion emails, which highlights that a relatively small number of attackers were responsible for most of the extortion emails.

The researchers also found that 97 per cent of extortion mail sender accounts sent out fewer than 10 attack emails each, and 90 per cent of the attacks demanded payments of less than $2,000 in Bitcoin.

"How did the attacker get hold of the account details, for example – were they exposed or stolen at some point? Or does it mean that the recipient has used their work account and device for inappropriate activity such as visiting questionable websites? Both scenarios have security implications for the company – and for the target. This can be embarrassing and distressing and can potentially make it more likely a victim will pay," said Taneja.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Nishant tanejaColumbia UniversityColumbia University PressBarracuda NetworksColumbia University Vagelos CollegeColumbia University Vagelos College Of PhysiciansColumbia university mailman school of public healthColumbia university medical centerColumbia university vagelosBarracuda networkColumbia university's mailman school of public health
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalColumbia University Initiates Suspensions for Students As Pro-Palestine Protests Spark Clashes

InternationalPro-Palestinian Protests Rock American Universities; Prompt Unprecedented Measures (Watch Video)

InternationalHackers extort money in crypto, threatens to expose embarrassing & illicit content

InternationalCan drops replace eye injections for retina disease?

NationalWheat’s alternative jowar more resilient to climate change, requires less water

International Realted Stories

International"Results of exploitation of people's resources": MEA on PoJK protests

InternationalPutin says no current plans to capture the city of Kharkiv

InternationalEU tells Microsoft to provide information on GenAI risks in Bing search else face fine

InternationalIndonesia's Semeru volcano erupts five times

InternationalClash between Afg-Pak border guards kills 5, injures 5: Afghan media