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Microsoft says disrupts cybercrime rings with roots in Kuwait, Algeria

01
Jul
2014

By Jim Finkle BOSTON (Reuters) – Microsoft Corp launched what it hopes will be the most successful private effort to date to crack down on cyber crime by moving to disrupt communications channels between hackers and infected PCs. The operation, which began on Monday under an order issued by a federal court in Nevada, targeted traffic involving malicious software known as Bladabindi and Jenxcus, which Microsoft said work in similar ways and were written and distributed by developers in Kuwait and Algeria. It is the first high-profile case involving malware written by developers outside of Eastern Europe, according to Richard Domingues Boscovich, assistant general counsel of Microsofts cybercrime-fighting Digital Crimes Unit. We never seen malware coded outside Eastern Europe that is as big as this.

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