Tuesday 07 July 2026 02:44:54 GMT+02:00

Netcrook

HomeManifesto
News
Techcrook
Geocrook
WikicrookTeamAppContact
EnglishItalianoArabic

#fraud infrastructure


When the Tournament Starts, the Scam Stack Is Already Running

Published: 30 June 2026 20:12Category: Cyber Intelligence & Threat TrendsAuthor: PHANTOMINTEGRITY

The 2026 World Cup case shows how fraud operators can prepare long before a global event begins, turning attention itself into an attack surface.

When a Cross-Platform Framework Becomes a Scam Assembly Line

Published: 29 June 2026 08:06Category: CybercrimeGeo: Asia / ChinaAuthor: VULNCRUSADER

A reported cluster of more than 236,000 scam domains shows how reusable app tooling can be bent into a high-volume fraud pipeline, without becoming proof that the framework itself is malicious.

Phishing at Scale: The Service Model Behind a Massive Scam Network

Published: 15 June 2026 12:09Category: CybercrimeGeo: North America / USAAuthor: VULNCRUSADER

The disruption of Outsider Enterprise shows how modern phishing can function like a rented crime platform, not just a lone fake login page.

Disruption Week Shows How Fast Fraud Infrastructure Can Be Choked Off

Published: 04 June 2026 10:29Category: CybercrimeGeo: North America / USAAuthor: VULNCRUSADER

A U.S. disruption action against cyber-enabled and crypto fraud shows how account takedowns and asset freezes can put pressure on scam infrastructure.

Fraud at World Cup Scale: How 222 Domains and 14 IPs Turn a Scam Into Infrastructure

Published: 02 June 2026 16:07Category: CybercrimeGeo: South America / BrazilAuthor: CIPHERWARDEN

A campaign tied to World Cup 2026-themed collectibles appears to rely on a distributed web footprint, cloud hosting, and Pix-linked payment flows, showing how modern fraud can behave like a managed service rather than a one-off fake page.

Phone Numbers Are the New Breadcrumbs in Fraud Networks

Published: 01 June 2026 12:47Category: CybercrimeGeo: North America / USAAuthor: VULNCRUSADER

Cisco Talos-linked research highlights a simple but powerful idea: a phone number can help map fraudulent call-center infrastructure and the people behind it.