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That online investment scam is a geopolitical problem

Cybercrime is a national security issue that should be taken as seriously as drug trafficking or terrorist financing

    • Battling scams has mainly been left up to banks, which have spent heavily on compensating customers and investing in education and warning systems.
    • Battling scams has mainly been left up to banks, which have spent heavily on compensating customers and investing in education and warning systems. PHOTO: ST
    Published Tue, Feb 25, 2025 · 05:00 AM

    ONLINE scams are a huge business. In fact, more than that, they have become a full industry with sophisticated supply chains of services, equipment and labour. Key groups in this sector also have direct connections to nations such as Russia, China and North Korea. What has long seemed just a lot of low-level crime has grown into a global, geopolitical problem.

    You are still your own best defence against losing money to online scammers, but the volume and sophistication of attacks are only increasing. Governments must do more to help defend their people, companies and institutions. Cybercrime is a national security issue, and the entire system from major hacking attacks to everyday phishing should be taken as seriously as drug trafficking or terrorist financing.

    To be fair, the problems haven’t been completely ignored, but national efforts have tended to focus on large-scale and direct ransomware attacks on states themselves, or their biggest services, such as healthcare. But these are just the tip of a massive iceberg.

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