Police boast of hacking VPN where criminals "believed themselves to be safe"
Summary
Police and international authorities dismantled a VPN service used by criminals, seizing servers and identifying users, after a years-long investigation.
View Cached Full Text
Cached at: 05/22/26, 09:26 PM
Similar Articles
Botnet of more than 17 million devices dismantled
Dutch authorities, in collaboration with the National Cyber Security Center, dismantled a botnet comprising over 17 million devices managed by 200 servers, linked to Russian proxy service provider ASOCKS.
Netherlands Seizes 800 Servers, Arrests 2 for Aiding Cyberattacks
Dutch authorities arrested two co-owners of hosting companies for providing infrastructure used by Russia in cyberattacks and influence operations, seizing over 800 servers.
EU calls VPNs "a loophole that needs closing" in age verification push
The European Parliamentary Research Service (EPRS) has labeled VPNs 'a loophole that needs closing' in the context of online age-verification laws, raising concerns about children bypassing regional content restrictions. The push has sparked pushback from privacy advocates and VPN providers, highlighting tensions between child safety regulation and digital privacy rights.
@hetmehtaa: my company got breached the attacker had access for 11 days on day 3 he emailed our IT helpdesk complained that the VPN…
A humorous yet alarming account of a company breach where the attacker, after 3 days of access, contacted IT helpdesk complaining about slow VPN, was given a password reset and upgraded access, then rated IT support 5 stars before being discovered during forensics.
Mozilla to UK regulators: VPNs are essential privacy and security tools
Mozilla urges UK regulators not to age-restrict VPNs, arguing they are essential privacy and security tools for all ages, and that policymakers should instead address root causes of online harm through platform accountability and digital literacy.