Crypto Crime – Tội phạm crypto, tài sản mã hoá, tiền ảo

Thị Trường Crypto Đen toàn cầu – Global Crypto Black Market – National Geographic

Đế chế tội phạm mạng tỉ đô được xây ở Cambodia như thế nào?- How a Billion Dollar Cambodian Cybercrime Empire Was Built  – Bloomberg 

Vì sao băng nhóm tội phạm Crypto ở Đông Nam Á nở rộ –  Why scam gangs in Southeast Asia are a growing global threat

Griffith.edu.au May 19, 2025 By Dr Hai Thanh Luong

From fake job offers to cryptocurrency fraud and online romance scams, Southeast Asia has become a global hub for transnational scam operations. 

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Online fraud leaves nobody safe – The vast and sophisticated global enterprise that is Scam Inc

economist.com

EDGAR MET Rita on LinkedIn. He worked for a Canadian software company, she was from Singapore and was with a large consultancy. They were just friends, but they chatted online all the time. One day Rita offered to teach him how to trade crypto. With her help, he made good money. So he raised his stake. However, after Edgar tried to cash out, it became clear that the crypto-trading site was a fake and that he had lost $78,000. Rita, it turned out, was a trafficked Filipina held prisoner in a compound in Myanmar.

In their different ways, Edgar and Rita were both victims of “pig-butchering”, the most lucrative scam in a global industry that steals over $500bn a year from victims all around the world. In “Scam Inc”, our eight-part podcastThe Economist investigates the crime, the criminals and the untold suffering they cause. “Scam Inc” is about the most significant change in transnational organised crime in decades.

Pig-butchering, or sha zhu pan, is Chinese criminal slang. First the scammers build a sty, with fake social-media profiles. Then they pick the pig, by identifying a target; raise the pig, by spending weeks or months building trust; cut the pig, by tempting them to invest; and butcher the pig by squeezing “every last drop of juice” from them, their family and friends.

The industry is growing fast. In Singapore scams have become the most common felony. The UN says that in 2023 the industry employed just under 250,000 people in Cambodia and Myanmar; another estimate puts the number of workers worldwide at 1.5m. In “Scam Inc” we report how a man in Minnesota lost $9.2m and how a bank in rural Kansas collapsed when its chief executive embezzled $47m to invest in crypto, under the tutelage of a fake online woman, called Bella. A part-time pastor, he also stole from his church.

Online scamming compares in size and scope to the illegal drug industry. Except that in many ways it is worse. One reason is that everyone becomes a potential target simply by going about their lives. Among the victims we identify are a neuroscience PhD and even relatives of FBI investigators whose job is to shut scams down. Operating manuals give people like Rita step-by-step instructions on how to manipulate their targets by preying on their emotions. It is a mistake to think romance is the only hook. Scammers target all human frailties: fear, loneliness, greed, grief and boredom.

The energy-sector threat: How to address cybersecurity vulnerabilities

Electric-power and gas companies are especially vulnerable to cyberattacks, but a structured approach that applies communication, organizational, and process frameworks can significantly reduce cyber-related risks.
In our experience working with utility companies, we have observed three characteristics that make the sector especially vulnerable to contemporary cyberthreats.First is an increased number of threats and actors targeting utilities: nation-state actors seeking to cause security and economic dislocation, cybercriminals who understand the economic value represented by this sector, and hacktivists out to publicly register their opposition to utilities’ projects or broad agendas.
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The rise and rise of a Vietnamese corporate empire-Vingroup và sự trỗi dậy đầy nghi vấn của một đế chế kinh tế

Bản tiếng anh: The rise and rise of a Vietnamese corporate empire
Dịch bởi Phùng Anh Khương (Luatkhoa.org)

Mấy tuần trước, tôi có đi về phía Đông Hà Nội, xuyên qua các khu công nghiệp và ruộng đồng, đến thành phố cảng Hải Phòng thuộc miền Bắc Việt Nam.

Bác tài chở tôi qua một cây cầu vượt biển để ra đảo Cát Hải. Tại đây, một thứ đáng chú ý đang dần thành hình: chiếc xe hơi “quốc dân” đầu tiên của Việt Nam đang được chế tạo, dưới nhãn hiệu VinFast. Tiếp tục đọc “The rise and rise of a Vietnamese corporate empire-Vingroup và sự trỗi dậy đầy nghi vấn của một đế chế kinh tế”

Facebook and Google have to install servers in Vietnam from early 2019

Last update 17:12 | 14/06/2018

Facebook and Google will have to install servers in Vietnam from January 1, 2019 as the Law on Cybersecurity comes into effect.

Facebook and Google have to install servers in Vietnam from early 2019, IT news, sci-tech news, vietnamnet bridge, english news, Vietnam news, news Vietnam, vietnamnet news, Vietnam net news, Vietnam latest news, Vietnam breaking news, vn news

The National Assembly on June 12 officially approved the Law on Cybersecurity with 423 out of the 466 delegates (86.96 per cent) attending the National Assembly meeting in favour of the proposal. 15 delegates disagreed and 28 delegates abstained.

The requirement for foreign firms to install servers in Vietnam is stipulated in Article 26 of the law. Accordingly, domestic and foreign firms providing telecommunications and internet services and value-added services in the Vietnamese cyberspace, have to authenticate and protect users’ information as they register digital accounts. Tiếp tục đọc “Facebook and Google have to install servers in Vietnam from early 2019”