N qld crime gang using credit card exploitation

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‘This is the biggest incident of the last 13 years of cybercrime,’ said Chris Smith, vice president and chief executive officer of the Australian Securities and Investments Commission.

‘We want to reassure Australians that if there is anything suspicious, we will investigate and prosecute the people involved.

‘It is too early to say when this attack will be traced, and this is yet another reason why the CFMEU needs to be more aggressive in this area.’

‘IT HAS BEEN HAPPENED’ The incident comes just days after authorities issued warnings of a cybercrooks group using an online credit card to breach a major company

At the time, there were no clear signs that a cyberattack was to blame – the threat was not as widespread as it is now, a 전주출장마사지former senior official said.

But this week, one of Australia’s most senior cybercriminals was convicted of three counts of computer-related fraud over the financial crisis, after spending three years hiding behind the internet and stealing from a number of Australians.

John McAfee was handed a three-year prison sentence in May and ordered to pay $90,000 in restitution to Australian consumers for his actions during the financial crisis.

Since that conviction, Australian authorities have begun an inquiry into allegations he acted as a ‘go-between’ for 마이다스 카지노those who targeted the financial system.

The CFMEU has previously blamed cybercrooks for the widespread cybercrime attack on the health insurance company HECS in June.

Mr McAfee’s conviction followed a year of police investigations into the criminal activity.

CCTV footage released by HECS, which showed the hacker taking customers’ money and then passing it off to himself, sparked a widespread debate in Europe over cybercrime and the risks people should consider in using computers at home.

The Federal Court last week heard how McAfee spent hundreds of thousands of euro on goods and services – including furniture, a car and a house – in Britain, the US, the Philippines, Thailand and other countries between 2005 and 2010.

He was eventually accused of theft of information and money laundering and conspiracy.

In July, two Australian computer experts were jailed for five years by a judge in Sydney in connection with the case, which he said was ‘absolutely outrageous’.