Close Menu
Technology Mag

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Notion CEO Ivan Zhao wants you to demand better from your tools

    August 11, 2025

    Fairphone’s new cables and chargers are both faster and tougher

    August 11, 2025

    Listen to Music While Riding Your Bike With Sena’s Smart Cycling Helmet

    August 11, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Subscribe
    Technology Mag
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    • Home
    • News
    • Business
    • Games
    • Gear
    • Reviews
    • Science
    • Security
    • Trending
    • Press Release
    Technology Mag
    Home » Feds Charge 16 Russians Allegedly Tied to Botnets Used in Ransomware, Cyberattacks, and Spying
    Security

    Feds Charge 16 Russians Allegedly Tied to Botnets Used in Ransomware, Cyberattacks, and Spying

    News RoomBy News RoomMay 27, 20253 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Email

    The hacker ecosystem in Russia, more than perhaps anywhere else in the world, has long blurred the lines between cybercrime, state-sponsored cyberwarfare, and espionage. Now an indictment of a group of Russian nationals and the takedown of their sprawling botnet offers the clearest example in years of how a single malware operation allegedly enabled hacking operations as varied as ransomware, wartime cyberattacks in Ukraine, and spying against foreign governments.

    The US Department of Justice today announced criminal charges today against 16 individuals law enforcement authorities have linked to a malware operation known as DanaBot, which according to a complaint infected at least 300,000 machines around the world. The DOJ’s announcement of the charges describes the group as “Russia-based,” and names two of the suspects, Aleksandr Stepanov and Artem Aleksandrovich Kalinkin, as living in Novosibirsk, Russia. Five other suspects are named in the indictment, while another nine are identified only by their pseudonyms. In addition to those charges, the Justice Department says the Defense Criminal Investigative Service (DCIS)—a criminal investigation arm of the Department of Defense—carried out seizures of DanaBot infrastructure around the world, including in the US.

    Aside from alleging how DanaBot was used in for-profit criminal hacking, the indictment also makes a rarer claim—it describes how a second variant of the malware it says was used in espionage against military, government, and NGO targets. “Pervasive malware like DanaBot harms hundreds of thousands of victims around the world, including sensitive military, diplomatic, and government entities, and causes many millions of dollars in losses,” US attorney Bill Essayli wrote in a statement.

    Since 2018, DanaBot—described in the criminal complaint as “incredibly invasive malware”—has infected millions of computers around the world, initially as a banking trojan designed to steal directly from those PCs’ owners with modular features designed for credit card and cryptocurrency theft. Because its creators allegedly sold it in an “affiliate” model that made it available to other hacker groups for $3,000 to $4,000 a month, however, it was soon used as a tool to install different forms of malware in a broad array of operations, including ransomware. Its targets, too, quickly spread from initial victims in Ukraine, Poland, Italy, Germany, Austria, and Australia to US and Canadian financial institutions, according to an analysis of the operation by cybersecurity firm Crowdstrike.

    At one point in 2021, according to Crowdstrike, Danabot was used in a software supply-chain attack that hid the malware in a javascript coding tool called NPM with millions of weekly downloads. Crowdstrike found victims of that compromised tool across the financial service, transportation, technology, and media industries.

    That scale and the wide variety of its criminal uses made DanaBot “a juggernaut of the e-crime landscape,” according to Selena Larson, a staff threat researcher at cybersecurity firm Proofpoint.

    More uniquely, though, DanaBot has also been used at times for hacking campaigns that appear to be state-sponsored or linked to Russian government agency interests. In 2019 and 2020, it was used to target a handful of Western government officials in apparent espionage operations, according to the DOJ’s indictment. According to Proofpoint, the malware in those instances was delivered in phishing messages that impersonated the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe and a Kazakhstan government entity.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email
    Previous ArticleInside Anthropic’s First Developer Day, Where AI Agents Took Center Stage
    Next Article A Helicopter, Halibut, and ‘Y.M.C.A’: Inside Donald Trump’s Memecoin Dinner

    Related Posts

    Leak Reveals the Workaday Lives of North Korean IT Scammers

    August 11, 2025

    The US Court Records System Has Been Hacked

    August 11, 2025

    Ex-NSA Chief Paul Nakasone Has a Warning for the Tech World

    August 10, 2025

    Hackers Went Looking for a Backdoor in High-Security Safes—and Now Can Open Them in Seconds

    August 9, 2025

    A Misconfiguration That Haunts Corporate Streaming Platforms Could Expose Sensitive Data

    August 9, 2025

    Age Verification Laws Send VPN Use Soaring—and Threaten the Open Internet

    August 8, 2025
    Our Picks

    Fairphone’s new cables and chargers are both faster and tougher

    August 11, 2025

    Listen to Music While Riding Your Bike With Sena’s Smart Cycling Helmet

    August 11, 2025

    Age Verification Is Sweeping Gaming. Is It Ready for the Age of AI Fakes?

    August 11, 2025

    Matter’s latest update doubles down on stability and pushes the platforms to play better together

    August 11, 2025
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    Don't Miss
    Security

    Leak Reveals the Workaday Lives of North Korean IT Scammers

    By News RoomAugust 11, 2025

    The tables show the potential target jobs for IT workers. One sheet, which seemingly includes…

    Join Our Next Livestream: What GPT-5 Means for ChatGPT Users

    August 11, 2025

    The US Court Records System Has Been Hacked

    August 11, 2025

    College Is Expensive. Shop These Back-to-School Discounted Laptops to Save

    August 11, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of use
    • Advertise
    • Contact
    © 2025 Technology Mag. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.