India battles rise in cybercrimes amid coronavirus

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Source: AP

Indian Ministry of Home Affairs officials have decried the ravaging rise in cybercrimes in the past four weeks.

The ministry affirmed that various crimes including scams ranging from free mobile recharges to offers of free Netflix subscriptions have flooded the internet.

Police in India have lodged a case against an unknown online fraudster who attempted to sell a world’s largest statue for $4bn, claiming the proceeds would be used to help the Gujarat state government fund in its fight against the novel coronavirus.

While the plot to sell the Statue of Unity is among the most audacious cases, police say cybercrimes have increased since the virus fear gripped the country.

Police and internal security officials said scammers have created fake versions of the flagship “PM CARES Fund” payments interface that look deceptively similar to the original and many Indians and non-resident Indians (NRIs) have fallen prey.

“We have received over 8,300 complaints from individuals across India and NRIs who have donated thousands of dollars into fake accounts,” said a senior home ministry official.

“We have already blocked all handles with permutations and combinations of the ‘PM Cares Fund’ that were illegitimate and we are being watchful and ensuring that the handles for donations get verified,” said Dilip Asbe, CEO of National Payments Corporation of India, an umbrella organisation for retail payments.

Police have registered cases against fake offers that Reliance Industries telecom arm Jio and streaming service Netflix Inc were offering discounted services.

However, officials at Netflix and Jio declined to comment on the fraud conducted under their companies’ names.

CERT-In, the Indian Computer Emergency Response Team, and ReBIT, the technology arm of the Reserve Bank of India, recently issued warnings about online threats and scams and asked financial institutions to be aware.

“The US Secret Service has also warned nations that during time of uncertainty and increased online activity, cybercriminals are actively working to exploit the current COVID-19 story with attacks aimed at taking advantage of the situation,” said Nitin Bhatnagar, a senior official at PCI Security Standards Council, a global standards body for the payment card industry.

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