Analysis: trade in stolen data is a boon for investigators and a headache for Kremlin

In early 2019, the journalist Andrei Zakharov managed to buy his own phone and banking records in a groundbreaking investigation into Russia’s thriving markets in stolen personal data, in which law enforcement and telecoms employees can be contracted anonymously to dip into their systems and pull out sensitive details on anyone.

A year and a half later, investigators from Bellingcat and the Insider used some of the same tools and clever analysis to out a secret FSB team that had been tasked with killing Alexei Navalny using a novichok nerve agent.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Children in hostels with ex-prisoners up to 55 miles from school, Shelter warns

Charity documents experiences of some of England’s 121,000 children housed in temporary…

Climate crisis deniers target scientists for vicious abuse on Musk’s Twitter

Abusive, often violent tweets denying the climate emergency have become a barrage…

Twitter to Launch Subscription Service, Aims to Double Revenue by 2023

Twitter Inc. TWTR 3.97% plans to introduce a subscription service for content…