Chinese authorities have sentenced nine individuals to prison terms ranging from five to fourteen years for orchestrating a telecommunications fraud scheme that defrauded 66,800 Indian victims of 517 million Indian rupees, equivalent to approximately $6 million in USDT. The scam operated through fabricated investment platforms and social media, luring victims with promises of high returns. In a separate incident, the Harbin Public Security Bureau in China has issued a wanted notice for three agents from the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) accused of cyberattacks during the Asian Winter Games held in Harbin. The NSA agents, identified as Katheryn A. Wilson, Robert J. Snelling, and Stephen W. Johnson, are suspected of targeting critical information systems and infrastructure, including those of the Games and other sectors in Heilongjiang Province. The cyberattacks allegedly involved the transmission of encrypted bytes to devices running Microsoft Windows, aiming to activate backdoors, and targeted Huawei, critical infrastructure, causing potential social disorder and stealing confidential information.
❗️China hunts 3 US NSA operatives For 'Repeated cyberattacks' on Huawei and 'critical infrastructure' at major world SPORTS events How should Trump respond? https://t.co/VWsfqSL1z5
The public security bureau of China's northeastern Harbin city has accused the United States National Security Agency (NSA) of launching cyber attacks "ahead of its time" during the Asian Winter Games in February, targeting important industries. https://t.co/ORlH5T2j7q https://t.co/jZWm5K3qxW
#Police authorities in Harbin, in northeast China's Heilongjiang Province, said on Tuesday that they are pursuing three operatives affiliated with the US National Security Agency (NSA) over suspected cyberattacks against #China. https://t.co/gp7zATiH00 https://t.co/reMvJcd8Pp