Tag Archive for: costly

Crypto scams more costly to US than ransomware, Feds say • The Register


The FBI says investment fraud was the form of cybercrime that incurred the greatest financial loss for Americans last year.

Investment scams, often promising huge returns, led to reported losses of $4.57 billion throughout the year – a 38 percent increase from $3.31 billion in 2022. The vast majority prey on those looking to make a quick buck with cryptocurrency, with these kinds of scams contributing just shy of $4 billion to the overall losses.

The FBI warned of increases in crypto scams in March last year, saying most begin with some sort of social engineering, like a romance or confidence scam, which then evolve into crypto investment fraud.

These cons also led to a rise in scams themed around the recovery of funds lost to investment scams, preying on vulnerable victims at their lowest. In some cases, victims would be strung along for long periods of time and convinced to make multiple payments to recovery services that would never reunite them with their stolen funds.

The total losses from investment fraud also beat those incurred by ransomware across the country, according to the latest report [PDF] from the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3). It was barely even a comparison, in fact, with ransomware apparently costing victims just $59.6 million for the entire year.

That figure is adjusted, not including the cost of downtime for businesses still in their recovery phases, for example, but it still seems especially low to a reporter who’s covered one-off ransom fees in the $15 million region.

The average ransom demand in the US is also said to be around $1.5 million, and with the IC3’s reported 2,825 ransomware-related complaints throughout the year, something isn’t adding up.

El Reg asked the feds for clarity but they didn’t immediately respond.

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Crypto scams more costly to the US than ransomware, Feds say • The Register


The FBI says investment fraud was the form of cybercrime that incurred the greatest financial loss for Americans last year.

Investment scams, often promising huge returns, led to reported losses of $4.57 billion throughout the year – a 38 percent increase from $3.31 billion in 2022. The vast majority prey on those looking to make a quick buck with cryptocurrency, with these kinds of scams contributing just shy of $4 billion to the overall losses.

The FBI warned of increases in crypto scams in March last year, saying most begin with some sort of social engineering, like a romance or confidence scam, which then evolve into crypto investment fraud.

These cons also led to a rise in scams themed around the recovery of funds lost to investment scams, preying on vulnerable victims at their lowest. In some cases, victims would be strung along for long periods of time and convinced to make multiple payments to recovery services that would never reunite them with their stolen funds.

The total losses from investment fraud also beat those incurred by ransomware across the country, according to the latest report [PDF] from the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3). It was barely even a comparison, in fact, with ransomware apparently costing victims just $59.6 million for the entire year.

That figure is adjusted, not including the cost of downtime for businesses still in their recovery phases, for example, but it still seems especially low to a reporter who’s covered one-off ransom fees in the $15 million region.

The average ransom demand in the US is also said to be around $1.5 million, and with the IC3’s reported 2,825 ransomware-related complaints throughout the year, something isn’t adding up.

El Reg asked the feds for clarity but they didn’t immediately respond.

A caveat was made in the report regarding the low reporting rates by ransomware victims across the country, and that the data only includes incidents reported to IC3 and not FBI field offices, so it appears the authorities are indeed aware of how low the reported figures seem.

“By reporting the incident, the FBI may be able to provide information on decryption, recover stolen data, possibly seize/recover…

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Comcast Business Introduces Internet Security to Help Protect Businesses Against Cyberattacks and Costly Breaches

Comcast Business SecurityEdge™ serves as the first line of defense against malware and other threats; Works to protect connected devices without having to install software Comcast Business today …
internet security – read more

The Army’s costly quest for the perfect radio continues

SITREP: The Army’s costly quest for the perfect radio. Click here for the transcript.

The decisions that the Department of Defense made about its “radios of the future” more than 20 years ago are still having an impact on the communications gear the military services purchase today. The Joint Tactical Radio System program may have ended, but it left behind a legacy that the US Army is now trying to get away from—while still holding fast to parts of JTRS’ framework.

JTRS, as Ars reported in 2012, was DOD’s quest to build the perfect set of communications gear based on software-defined radio (SDR) technology. SDR was in its infancy in the mid-1990s, but the Joint Program Office JTRS (the organization driving the DOD-wide program) was convinced that investing early would pay off with cheaper hardware in the longterm, and the government-owned software (a sort of closed open source, with a library available to all vendors) would prevent lock-in with a limited set of contractors.

CORBA style

JPEO JTRS is gone, but its software lives on. The Joint Tactical Networking Center (JTNC) has taken over management of the Software Communications Architecture, the application framework and POSIX-based real-time operating system that powers all the software-defined radios birthed from JTRS-descendant communications gear, along with libraries for the various mission-specific “waveforms” used by different radios. SCA provides an interface for software to manipulate the field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) in radio hardware to reconfigure how they function. And until recently, those interfaces required radio developers to use the Common Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA) to access them.

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Biz & IT – Ars Technica