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Scaling cybercrime disruption through innovation and AI

24 June 2026 at 14:30

Microsoft is taking a new approach to fighting cybercrime, targeting the cyberattack supply chain, not just individual services. In a case unsealed today, we are simultaneously targeting two widely used cybercrime tools, Amadey and StealC, after AI-assisted analysis revealed they rely on the same infrastructure.

This action goes after the cybercrime “assembly line,” where coordinated tools drive ransomware, financial fraud, and disruptions to public services. Amadey and StealC are often used alongside each other: Amadey helps attackers gain access to devices, while StealC steals passwords and sensitive information. Together, they form a critical link in the chain. In the first two weeks of May alone, Amadey and StealC were linked to more than 140,000 infected computers globally, highlighting how widely they are used.

Working with Europol and industry partners, we targeted both tools at once. The goal: break the chain. Since the start of the operation, Microsoft has identified more than 18,000 victim computers, severed criminal control of those devices, and is working with telecommunications providers to help protect affected customers globally.

When multiple parts of an operation are disrupted together, attacks are harder to launch, scale, and recover from. The result: fewer disrupted services, fewer opportunities for cybercriminals to profit, and more friction when they try to rebuild.

It’s no longer enough to go after threats one by one. We need to interrupt how the attacks are put together. 

What’s different about this action   

Microsoft has long used civil legal action to disrupt cybercriminal infrastructure and pioneered the innovative use of existing laws, including the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), a US law designed to target organized crime.

What’s new is how we’re combining AI analysis with an expanded use of that law.

Amadey and StealC were developed by separate cybercriminals, but they relied on the same infrastructure. To understand how they worked, investigators used AI, including Copilot, to quickly analyze the malware, asking questions in plain English instead of manually combing through complex code. That helped surface key details, uncover hidden data, and test findings in a fraction of the time, turning what would have taken hours or days into minutes and enabling the team to spot connections faster.

Those insights allowed the legal team to treat both malware families as part of a single conspiracy. Instead of going after each tool separately, as we have done in the past, we used RICO to charge multiple complicit enablers involved across the operation. In total, Microsoft’s Digital Crimes Unit disrupted over 200 command-and-control servers—the systems criminals use to control infected devices, steal data, and keep attacks running.

By targeting tools together, we can disrupt the cybercrime chain more efficiently and more effectively, in a way that better reflects how these networks actually operate today.

Cybercrime now runs like an assembly line 

Cybercrime is no longer a series of isolated attacks—it’s a coordinated system.

Specialized tools handle each step: one gains access, another steals credentials, and others sell or exploit that access for fraud, ransomware, espionage, or other nefarious purposes. Different actors may be involved at each stage, but together they turn access into profit, quickly and at scale.

How cybercrime tools are built to be modular

That structure also creates a point of vulnerability. The people behind these cybercriminal tools may never interact directly, but their tools are designed to work together. If those connections can be identified, multiple stages of an attack can be disrupted at once.

How these attacks play out in the real world 

Most people will never hear the names Amadey or StealC, but they feel the effects. A hospital locked out of critical systems. A city unable to deliver essential services. A small business losing access to accounts overnight. A retiree who lost their life savings.

These attacks don’t happen all at once. They unfold step by step: attackers get in, passwords are stolen, access is reused or sold, and sometimes repurposed for more targeted operations. For example, Microsoft has observed Russian-affiliated actor Secret Blizzard leveraging Amadey infections to deploy custom malware against targets in Ukraine.

By targeting multiple points in that chain at once, we reduce the chance that a single compromise turns into widespread harm. Put simply: fewer attacks succeed and fewer people feel the impact when they do.

No one organization can do this alone 

Actions like this underscore a fundamental reality: we’re successful when we collaborate. No single organization, whether government or industry, has full visibility into how cyber threats operate across borders and sectors. What makes this effort effective is the combination of perspectives and data.

Microsoft had been tracking Amadey due to its impact on customers, working with cybersecurity partners ESET, BitSight, Lumen, and Mitsui Bussan Secure Directions (MBSD) to better understand how it operated. At the same time, Europol’s European Cybercrime Centre (EC3), together with European law enforcement partners including Germany’s Federal Criminal Police Office and the Dutch and Danish National Police, was investigating StealC as part of Operation Endgame, alongside IBM X-Force and Proofpoint.

Bringing those efforts together expanded our collective datasets and made it possible to identify the connections between the two tools and act on them quickly. That shared understanding enabled a coordinated response that went further than any single organization could achieve alone.

 

This shows why partnerships matter. Industry shares technical insight, government brings visibility, and we need trusted ways to exchange that information. Only by working from the same picture can we stay ahead of attackers, disrupting not just individual tools but also the systems that make cybercrime possible.

Creating sustained pressure on cybercrime  

This work doesn’t end with a single action. Cybercriminals adapt quickly, which is why we continue tracking how these operations evolve and working with partners to disrupt them.

Microsoft’s court-authorized disruption in this case is paired with ongoing efforts to track how cybercriminals rebuild, identify new infrastructure, and work with partners to disrupt the services they rely on to operate. It also includes incorporating the findings from this disruption into initiatives like Microsoft’s Statutory Automated Disruption program, which helps accelerate the removal of malicious domains and infrastructure.

The goal is not just to stop one operation but to slow the system itself—making attacks harder to launch, scale, and recover from. By combining AI-driven insight, legal action, and strong partnerships, we can continue to raise the cost of cybercrime and reduce its impact.

For more than a decade, Microsoft’s Digital Crimes Unit (DCU) has worked to disrupt cybercrime and nation-state threats, filing around 40 cases since 2008 and partnering with law enforcement to take down criminal networks. Learn more about the team’s efforts here.

 

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Strengthening our approach to tackling non-consensual intimate imagery

When intimate images are shared without consent—whether real or AI-generated—the harm is immediate, deeply personal, and often long-lasting. It can affect someone’s sense of safety, dignity, and control, both online and offline. Protecting people from harms like non-consensual intimate imagery (NCII) has long been a priority for Microsoft. And as technology advances, our response continues to evolve to tackle very real challenges like the proliferation of highly realistic synthetic imagery. With the US Take It Down Act coming into force this month, establishing new federal protections against the spread of NCII, it’s important to share how we’re evolving our approach: making it easier to report harm, taking new steps to detect known NCII, and enabling more effective enforcement across our services.

Expanding protections across Microsoft services

Our goal is to make it simpler for individuals, or their representatives, to report violative content to Microsoft. We have strengthened our global reporting processes for NCII with more intuitive form, with clear options to describe harm, including both real and AIgenerated images. These changes are designed to ease the burden for people in a distressing moment and enable faster, more effective action by our teams. Microsoft’s NCII policy is applied consistently across real and synthetic content, recognizing that the harm to individuals is the same, regardless of how an image was created. To report content on Microsoft services, hit Report A Concern or in the product where you encounter the content.  

We also want to proactively detect and prevent the spread of known NCII by working with StopNCII.org, a reporting platform that enables individuals to create a digital “fingerprint,” or hash, of their images. Two years ago, we provided StopNCII.org with a new version of PhotoDNA that enables victims to create a hash without an image ever leaving their device. This can then be used by StopNCII.org partners to detect and remove matching NCII content across platforms, allowing industry to work together to prevent re-sharing and protect individuals’ privacyWe have been piloting the use of these hashes in Bing since September 2024. 

We have now expanded our use of validated StopNCII.org hashes across Microsoft consumer services, including Teams Free, OneDrive, and Xbox. We will implement these changes carefully to advance effectiveness and accuracy—accelerating removals, automating where appropriate, maintaining human review for reported cases, and providing clear, accessible paths for users to appeal decisions.

Enhancing our collective response to this harm

No single company can address NCII alone. It requires coordination across industry, governments, and civil society. Microsoft will continue working with partners to improve shared tools and approaches that help prevent this content from spreading. We will also continue to advocate for clear, effective policies that protect victims, support innovation, and strengthen accountability across the ecosystem.

We will also continue to advocate for policies that support efforts to advance laws that prevent and deter image-based abuse. Microsoft advocated in support of the US Take It Down Act and welcomes the European Union’s work to strengthen protections against “nudification” apps, alongside global efforts to criminalize this misuse of technology. We are closely tracking Ofcom’s recent announcement that new measures will be required under the UK Online Safety Act to address illegal NCII harms. We believe our proactive work in this area will help us maintain trust with survivors, users, and regulators, among others.

Speed, clarity, and trust matter for people affected by intimate image abuse. When someone reaches out for help, we will strive to respond quickly, respectfully, and effectively. Our goal, though, is to invest in technologies and partnerships that reduce the likelihood of harm. We have joined forces with Childnet, a UK NGO that aims to safeguard children online, and created educational materials to prevent the misuse of AI to create intimate imagery among teens. These materials have now been released in the UK, as well as localized with partners in Singapore, South Korea, and Japan.

I am proud to learn from our digital safety team, which is carefully charting our path, and from the many industry and community leaders contributing to this work. This is an evolving challenge. We are committed to the journey, grounded by the voices of experts and survivors.

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Disrupting Fox Tempest: A cybercrime service that turned “verified” software into a pathway for ransomware 

19 May 2026 at 17:03

Every day, we decide what software to trust in seconds guided by simple labels such as “verified,” “secure,” and “safe to install.” The problem is that those signs can be manipulated.

Today, Microsoft unsealed a legal case in the US District Court for the Southern District of New York targeting a cybercrime service known as Fox Tempest, which, since May 2025, has enabled cybercriminals to disguise malware as legitimate software. The malware-signing-as-a-service (MSaaS) worked by fraudulently accessing and abusing code signing tools, such as Microsoft’s Artifact Signing, a system designed to verify that software is legitimate and hasn’t been tampered with. Cybercriminals used the service to deliver malware and enable ransomware and other attacks, infecting thousands of machines and compromising networks worldwide.

For the first time, Microsoft is taking public action against a powerful, but often unseen, enabler within the cybercrime ecosystem, targeting how cybercriminals prepare and employ techniques to optimize their rate of success. To disrupt the service, we seized Fox Tempest’s website signspace[.]cloud, took offline hundreds of the virtual machines running the operation, and blocked access to a site hosting the underlying code. This action builds upon persistent internal efforts to revoke fraudulently obtained code‑signing certificates and enhance our defenses and employ new security features to detect and thwart such malicious activity. It’s already having an impact: cybercriminals are complaining about challenges accessing the current service.

Our impact extends beyond one actor. The lawsuit targets Fox Tempest’s infrastructure and also names Vanilla Tempest as a co-conspirator, a prominent ransomware group that used the service to deploy malware like Oyster, Lumma Stealer, and Vidar, and ransomware, including  Rhysida, in multiple recent cyberattacks. Vanilla Tempest has targeted schools, hospitals, and other critical organizations worldwide, while Rhysida, a highly evolved ransomware variant that both encrypts files and steals data, often used for double extortion, has been used by various actors in numerous high-profile attacks globally, including to steal and leak internal documents from the British Library and to disrupt operations at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport. Microsoft’s investigation further linked Fox Tempest to various additional ransomware affiliates and families, including INC, Qilin, Akira, and  others.

More broadly, this case points to how cybercrime is changing.  What once required a single group to carry out an attack from start to finish is now broken into a modular ecosystem where services are bought and sold and work interchangeably with one another. Some services are inexpensive and widely used. Others, like Fox Tempest, are highly specialized and expensive because they remove friction or bypass obstacles that make attacks fail, making them both more reliable and harder to detect. As seen with Fox Tempest, when these services are combined with AI-powered tactics, attacks can scale more easily, reaching more people and becoming more convincing.

This kind of abuse isn’t new, but it is evolving

Illicit code-signing certificates have been  sold and trafficked for more than a decade. That includes its use by nation-state actors to target critical infrastructure organizations in Europe. What’s changed is how this activity is marketed, packaged, and sold as a service, along with the scale at which it is now used across ransomware campaigns. Instead of buying certificates one-by-one, criminals upload their malware to a service that signs it for them.

What also makes this model notable is the level of investment. Unlike lower-cost services like RedVDS, a cybercriminal infrastructure provider that costs as little as $24 per  month, which Microsoft disrupted earlier this year, Fox Tempest shows that more sophisticated actors are willing to pay thousands of dollars for advanced capabilities that make attacks easier to carry out, harder to detect, and more likely to succeed.

How Fox Tempest sold “legitimacy” at scale

Fox Tempest’s business model was straightforward: sell fraudulent code-signing capability, let others package malware, and enable attacks downstream. The model has generated millions in proceeds, demonstrating significant financial profit.

Behind the scenes, the operators built access at scale. Using fabricated identities and impersonating legitimate organizations, they created hundreds of fraudulent Microsoft accounts to obtain real code-signing credentials in volume. Customers who paid for Fox Tempest’s services could then upload malicious files via an online portal for them to  be signed using Fox Tempest-controlled certificates. Cybercriminals paid thousands of dollars for the service, reflecting how valuable this capability was.

Fox Tempest’s pricing model form and Telegram channel where you could purchase the service. The more you pay, the quicker you get access to the service.

Once signed, their malware appeared legitimate. Attackers then distributed the signed malware through tactics such as search manipulation and malicious ads, where users are more likely to trust what they encounter.  AI then helped generate and refine these campaigns  to reach a broader audience.

How code-signed malware appears in search results.
Fake Microsoft Teams download page and delivery mechanism for disguised code-signed malware

That changed the odds. Malicious software that should have been blocked or flagged by antivirus and other safeguards was more likely to be opened, allowed to run, or pass security checks—essentially allowing malware to hide in plain sight. Instead of forcing their way in, attackers could slip through the front door by masquerading as a welcomed guest.

An overview of malware‑signing‑as‑a‑service.

As Microsoft disabled fraudulent accounts, revoked fraudulently obtained certificates and introduced enhanced protections, the Fox Tempest operators continually adapted. In February 2026, they ultimately shifted to networks of third-party-hosted virtual machines to maintain and scale operations. That kind of rapid change is part of the model: these services evolve quickly in response to pressure and friction. In fact, Microsoft has observed further adaptations in response to our layered disruption efforts, with Fox Tempest attempting to shift operations and customers to another code-signing service.

Fox Tempest’s response to the disruptive efforts—translated from Russian by a third-party partner

In addition to seizing the core infrastructure behind the operation and degrading its ability to function at scale, we have taken further steps to prevent similar abuse, removing fraudulent accounts, strengthening verification, and limiting how this type of access can be reused. More technical details on the operation and the steps we’re taking to prevent similar abuse are available in this Microsoft Threat Intelligence blog.

Cutting off a critical enabler of cybercrime

This action wasn’t about stopping one actor. It sought to strategically neutralize a vital service that many attackers, particularly ransomware groups, rely on. When legitimate code signing services are weaponized, everything downstream gets easier: malware looks legitimate, security warnings are less likely to trigger, and attacks are more likely to succeed. Degrading that capability adds friction and forces a reset. The success rates of attacks decrease, and attackers have to rebuild, find new ways in, and accept more risk with each attempt—driving up both the cost and the time required to operate.

Importantly, disruption actions don’t happen in isolation and are never one-and- done. Collaboration is critical, as different organizations and sectors have visibility into different parts of the cybercrime ecosystem. In this case, we are working closely with cybersecurity company Resecurity, whose insights help us better understand how Fox Tempest operates. We are also collaborating closely with Europol’s European Cybercrime Centre (EC3) and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI). As we’ve seen in previous efforts, we expect actors to try to rebuild. Collectively, we will continue to take action and keep the pressure on. That also means strengthening the code signing ecosystem through intelligence sharing and partnering with other code signing services, so it’s harder for malicious actors to regain that ground in the first place.

When attackers can make malicious software look legitimate, it undermines how people and systems decide what’s safe. Disrupting that capability is key to raising the cost of cybercrime. As threats evolve, the Microsoft Digital Crimes Unit will continue working with partners across industry and law enforcement to persistently identify and cut off the services that enable them.

For more than a decade, the Microsoft Digital Crimes Unit (DCU) has persistently disrupted cybercrime and nation-state threats targeting people, organizations, and critical infrastructure. Explore major disruptions—and the ongoing cases and operations behind them here: Disrupting cyberthreats since 2008 | Microsoft

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Strengthening cyber capacity in Kenya: A new toolkit with lessons for the region

4 May 2026 at 16:00

When a major cyber incident hits, the first decisions aren’t technical—they’re human. Who takes the lead? How quickly can information be shared? When should governments step in, and how do you protect public trust while keeping essential services running? 

These questions are at the heart of Microsoft’s Advancing Regional Cybersecurity (ARC) initiative, launched in 2025 to help governments strengthen cyber preparedness through practical, public-private collaboration. Today, we’re sharing the first tangible output of that work: the ARC Kenya Exercise Report & Toolkit, developed through a tabletop exercise held in Nairobi in December 2025.  

Developed with Kenya’s National Computer and Cybercrime Coordination Committee (NC4) and RiskSight, the toolkit is a practical planning resource designed to help government and cross-sector leaders prepare for cyber crises before they occur. It is grounded in real conversations among leaders from government, regulators, critical infrastructure operators, law enforcement, academia, and the private sector working through what a serious cyber incident would demand of them, together. 

Stress‑testing decisions before a crisis hits

The ambition of the “Silicon Savannah” makes Kenya a compelling setting for this work. Its digital economy is expanding rapidly—from mobilefirst financial services to cloudenabled public infrastructure—positioning the country as a regional technology leader. But rapid digital growth also brings increased exposure to more sophisticated cyber threats. As systems become more interconnected, a serious cyber incident can quickly disrupt essential services, undermine public trust, and threaten economic stability. 

Kenya’s approach recognizes this reality and reflects a critical principle: cybersecurity is not separate from innovation; it is one of the conditions that allows digital transformation to scale safely. The ARC initiative embodies this philosophy and helps decision makers confront the practical realities of coordination, escalation, and response in this complex environment. 

This is exactly what the ARC Kenya tabletop exercise was designed to do. The objective was not to test tools but to stresstest decision making under pressure. Participants were challenged with complex scenarios—including AIenabled breaches, ransomware attacks, and infrastructurelevel disruptions. The focus was not on technical fixes but on leadership clarity, crossagency coordination, and realtime decision making in highpressure environments. 

The outcome was both a roadmap for the unknown and a clear recognition of the need for shared expectations before a crisis begins—particularly around leadership and authority, trusted information sharing channels, and agreed response frameworks. These gaps, identified by participants themselves, now form the backbone of the ARC Kenya Toolkit. 

What the ARC Kenya toolkit delivers

The toolkit translates the lessons of the exercise into concrete actions that leaders can take now—before the next incident occurs. It also serves as a practical and specific 12month roadmap for strengthening Kenya’s cyber preparedness, moving from lessons identified to durable, institutional capability. Specifically, the toolkit provides recommendations to: 

  • Clarify national leadership during major cyber incidents, enabling government, regulators, law enforcement, and critical infrastructure operators to coordinate more quickly, with fewer gaps and overlaps. 
  • Establish practical, standardsaligned incident response models for the entire country, including priority playbooks that teams can train on and execute consistently. 
  • Strengthen operational readiness across sectors, with better coordination between security operations centers (SOCs), clearer escalation thresholds, and more reliable incident reporting pathways. 
  • Deepen trusted information sharing and publicprivate collaboration through common handling rules, safer “goodfaith” reporting mechanisms, and regular joint exercises to build muscle memory before a crisis.

Taken together, these elements enable leaders not only to respond more effectively to cyber incidents, but to institutionalize preparedness, coordination, and resilience across the national cyber ecosystem. For African countries more broadly, the model also offers a practical pathway to strengthen regional cyber cooperation—by aligning expectations around escalation, information sharing, and public‑private coordination before a crossborder incident occurs. By translating highlevel principles into practical, repeatable approaches to crisis readiness, the toolkit underscores the value of trusted international partnerships and alignment with global norms for responsible state behavior in cyberspace. 

Why Kenya’s approach matters beyond its borders

Many countries across the Global South are grappling with similar challenges: fragmented ownership of critical infrastructure, uneven cyber capacity across sectors, and the need to coordinate rapidly under pressure. While firmly grounded in Kenya’s national context, the lessons from ARC Kenya are therefore intentionally designed to resonate far beyond its borders and to be highly transferable. 

Importantly, this work does not end in Kenya. We are already building on these lessons through ARC engagements in other regions, including a new workstream in Mexico, applying the same approach to strengthen preparedness, coordination, and resilience across different national contexts. 

By design, the ARC initiative is not simply a record of a single exercise. It is a foundation others can build on—at a national or regional level—offering leaders a practical starting point to turn shared responsibility into sustained capability. 

Explore the ARC Kenya Toolkit & Tabletop Exercise

 

For more than a decade, the Microsoft Digital Crimes Unit (DCU) has persistently disrupted cybercrime and nation-state threats targeting people, organizations, and critical infrastructure. Explore major disruptions—and the ongoing cases and operations behind them here: Disrupting cyberthreats since 2008 | Microsoft

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New findings show how hands-on support can improve water sector cybersecurity

19 March 2026 at 15:01

Cyber threats to water systems are no longer hypothetical. When attacks succeed, communities can face loss of trust, safety concerns, or service disruptions.

Today, Microsoft, in collaboration with the Cyber Readiness Institute (CRI) and the Center on Cyber Technology and Innovation (CCTI), is releasing a report that examines both the urgency of this challenge and what it will take to close the cyber readiness gap in the water sector. The report draws on a pilot program that provided water and wastewater utilities with practical cybersecurity training paired with hands‑on coaching, testing whether real-world support can meaningfully improve cyber readiness.

The findings point to a clear conclusion: improving cyber resilience in the water sector is achievable when training is paired with hands-on support and delivered through trusted sector partners. Because of the success of this pilot, the program is now a permanent offering, giving water utilities continued access to practical training and support to strengthen cyber resilience and better protect their communities from evolving threats.

Why cyber resilience in the water sector matters now

Water and wastewater utilities underpin public health, economic activity, and community resilience across all critical infrastructure. Yet recent assessments from the U.S. intelligence community and public reporting on cyber incidents underscore how exposed many systems remain. Even larger, well-resourced utilities have experienced cyber incidents, highlighting vulnerabilities that are far more pronounced among smaller operators serving rural and underserved communities.

Awareness of cyber risk is growing, but awareness is not preparedness. The challenge is how to move from growing awareness to sustained, operational readiness, especially for utilities with limited time, funding, and technical capacity.

What the pilot set out to test and what it showed

The CRI pilot was designed to answer a practical question facing the water sector: can accessible, behavior‑focused cybersecurity training paired with hands‑on support meaningfully improve cyber readiness?

Participating utilities used CRI’s free Cyber Readiness Program, which focuses on core cybersecurity practices such as strong authentication, software updates, phishing awareness, and secure data handling. Utilities also had access to CRI Certified Cyber Coaches, who worked directly with designated “Cyber Leaders” inside utilities to help translate training into policies, playbooks, and incident response planning. This model paired accessible training with personalized support to help utilities make meaningful progress despite resource constraints. The pilot revealed three clear findings about what helps and what limits cyber readiness in the water sector.

  • CRI program improves readiness: Participating utilities reported stronger cybersecurity fundamentals, greater confidence responding to incidents, and the identification of previously undocumented, yet critical, gaps such as missing continuity plans and weak password practices.
  • Hands-on support accelerates success: Utilities paired with a CRI‑certified coach were significantly more likely to complete the program than those participating on a self‑paced basis.
  • Demand exceeds capacity: While interest in cybersecurity support is high, staffing shortages, limited funding, and dependence on third-party vendors continue to limit utilities’ ability to fully implement improvements. Participation data helps explain this finding: of the 113 utilities that expressed initial interest, 72 began the program and 43 completed it.

Implications for policymakers and the ecosystem

The findings point to a central takeaway for policymakers and the ecosystem: improving cybersecurity outcomes requires moving beyond sharing information to providing hands-on support that helps utilities implement and sustain change.

  • Free resources are necessary but not enough: No-cost guidance alone cannot overcome staffing and funding constraints. Effective programs must include implementation support, like cyber coaches, to drive real outcomes.
  • Incentives increase participation: Tying cybersecurity training to operator licensing or continuing education requirements helps embed cyber readiness into routine professional development.
  • Trusted messengers drive engagement: Participation and completion were highest when programs were facilitated through established sector associations and networks that utilities already trust.

A path forward through collaboration

The lesson from this pilot is clear: cyber readiness improves when training is paired with hands‑on support and facilitated through trusted partners. But the findings also underscore a broader reality: lasting progress will require moving beyond information sharing toward approaches that build real, sustained capacity building on the ground.

At Microsoft, this work reflects a practical commitment to supporting cyber resilience across critical infrastructure, helping to move from awareness to action. Addressing the challenges identified in this report will require continued collaboration among policymakers, sector associations, nonprofits, and the private sector.

This work also complements Microsoft’s broader commitment to be water positive, including minimizing our water use and replenishing more water than we consume[1][2], by helping strengthen the resilience of the water systems and utilities that serve communities. Supporting practical cyber readiness is one way we can contribute to more resilient water systems for the future.

[1] Sustainability | Microsoft

[2] Building Community-First AI Infrastructure – Microsoft On the Issues

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Defending the gates: How a global coalition disrupted Tycoon 2FA, a major driver of initial access and large-scale online impersonation

4 March 2026 at 17:00

One email was all it took. An employee clicked what looked like a routine signin request. Behind the scenes, attackers swiped credentials, slipped past security controls, impersonated a trusted user, and gained access to critical systems. In other cases, similar intrusions delayed paychecks, rerouted invoices, stole sensitive data, locked up entire networks, interrupted patient care, and strained already tight budgets at schools and critical services. 

Those attacks were powered by Tycoon 2FA. Today, Microsoft, Europol, and industry partners announced a coordinated action to disrupt the service responsible for tens of millions of fraudulent emails reaching over 500,000 organizations each month worldwide. 

Disrupting a global phishing operation 

Active since at least 2023, Tycoon 2FA enabled thousands of cybercriminals to impersonate real users and gain unauthorized access to email and online service accounts, including Microsoft 365, Outlook, and Gmail. Unlike traditional phishing kits, Tycoon 2FA was designed to defeat additional security protections, including multifactor authentication, allowing cybercriminals to log in as legitimate users without triggering alerts, even on protected accounts. 

Acting under a court order from the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, and for the first time in coordination with Europol’s Cyber Intelligence Extension Programme (CIEP), Microsoft seized 330 active domains that powered Tycoon 2FA’s core infrastructure, including control panels and fraudulent login pages. The CIEP framework brought public and privatesector partners together to move from simply sharing intelligence to coordinated, crossborder action, accelerating disruption and limiting further harm. 

Taking this infrastructure offline cuts off a major pipeline for account takeovers and helps protect people and organizations from followon attacks such as data theft, ransomware, business email compromise, and financial fraud. 

The scale and realworld impact of Tycoon 2FA 

By mid2025, Tycoon 2FA accounted for approximately 62 percent of all phishing attempts Microsoft blocked, including more than 30 million emails in a single month. That placed Tycoon 2FA among the largest phishing operations globally.  

Despite extensive defenses, the service is linked to an estimated 96,000 distinct phishing victims worldwide since 2023, including more than 55,000 Microsoft customers.  

Healthcare and education organizations were hit hardest. More than 100 members of HealthISAC, a global threat-sharing group for the health sector and a co-plaintiff in this case, were successfully phished. In New York alone, at least two hospitals, six municipal schools, and three universities faced attempted or successful compromise through Tycoon 2FA. These incidents had tangible consequences: disrupted operations, diverted resources, and delayed patient care.  

Why Tycoon 2FA was so dangerous 

Tycoon 2FA combined convincing phishing templates, realistic landing pages, and realtime capture of credentials and authentication codes into an easytouse package that scaled quickly. By lowering the technical barrier to entry, it allowed criminals with limited expertise to run sophisticated impersonation campaigns. 

With each successful phishing victim, attackers could operate with the same level of trust as legitimate users moving laterally across systems, accessing sensitive data, and abusing signon connections without raising alarms. Research from Microsoft Threat Intelligence provides more details on how Tycoon 2FA operated. 

Dark‑themed admin dashboard showing security and login activity. At the top are summary cards for Total Visits (5), Valid (4), Invalid (2), and SSO (0). The center includes a donut chart comparing valid, invalid, and SSO logins, a bar chart of login websites with Microsoft highlighted, and a world map labeled “Visitors by Country.” Below, a table lists valid accounts with columns for email, website, browser, IP, country, 2FA status, and date, with action buttons such as “Copy Zip Pass” and “Download.”
The Tycoon 2FA customer dashboard.

This shift reflects a broader trend in cybercrime: identity, not infrastructure, has become the primary target. A single compromised account can now unlock banking systems, healthcare portals, workplace applications, and social media accounts. 

Inside the impersonation economy

Tycoon 2FA operated like a business within the broader impersonationforhire ecosystem. The primary developer, Saad Fridi, who is believed to be based in Pakistan, worked alongside partners responsible for marketing, payments, and technical support. 

Cybercriminals typically used Tycoon 2FA alongside other illicit services. While Tycoon 2FA captured credentials and session tokens, other services handled mass email delivery, malware distribution, hosting, and access monetization. For example, RedVDS, disrupted by Microsoft in January 2026, provided inexpensive virtual computers, which cybercriminals paired with Tycoon 2FA to deliver phishing campaigns. Together, these different services created an interconnected ecosystem for identitybased attacks. Disrupting one component can have cascading effects across the cybercrime economy. 

Sustained pressure reshapes the market 

Over the past 18 months, Microsoft’s Digital Crimes Unit has targeted multiple services that enable impersonation and initial access, including extensive disruption operations of Lumma StealerRaccoonO365Fake ONNX (aka “Caffeine”), and RedVDS. 

When widely used tools are disrupted, attackers are forced to adapt, often shifting to alternatives like Tycoon 2FA. This substitution pattern shows how sustained pressure prevents any single service from remaining dominant while steadily raising the cost and risk of cybercrime. 

These efforts have led to arrests in Egypt and Nigeria, complete service shutdowns, infrastructure loss, and reputational damage for operators beyond lawenforcement reach. RedVDS alone lost more than 95 percent of its infrastructure since January 2026, significantly degrading its ability to support mass impersonation campaigns and other online scams. 

As pressure increased, many operators tightened access controls, retreated into closed channels, or shut down entirely to avoid legal action. In Tycoon 2FA’s case, Microsoft could not purchase access to the service; the operator rejected attempts by our investigators, requiring a trusted intermediary. In fact, Tycoon 2FA’s operator and the nowarrested developer of RaccoonO365 communicated with one another, highlighting the ecosystem’s interdependence and how disruptions in one area influence activity elsewhere. 

Screenshot of a dark‑mode chat conversation interface. Multiple message bubbles discuss “2FA/MFA” services, with usernames such as “Raccoon0365,” “ItsPump,” and others visible. Messages reference choosing or not choosing a provider, friendship between groups, and competition between services. Timestamps appear next to messages, and emoji reactions are included.
Correspondence suggesting interactions between the operators of RaccoonO365 and Tycoon 2FA.

Global threats require global action 

Cybercrime operates across borders, and effective response must do the same. Disrupting Tycoon 2FA spanned multiple jurisdictions, underscoring why sustained, coordinated pressure is essential, especially as cybercrime becomes more scalable through automation and AI. 

Microsoft Threat Intelligence, joining many security researchers, identified Tycoon 2FA as one of the most significant threats to identity-based attacks. Microsoft’s Digital Crimes Unit consulted with Europol, which also tracked the actor based on intelligence supplied by TrendAI. Through the CIEP, Europol convened partners to take action. Microsoft worked with industry partners to pursue a coordinated infrastructure disruption, while law enforcement authorities in Latvia, Lithuania, Portugal, Poland, Spain, and the United Kingdom conducted seizures of infrastructure and carried out other operational measures linked to Tycoon 2FA. 

Industry partners, including ProofpointIntel 471, and eSentire, expanded visibility through telemetry, threat intelligence, and criminalforum insight. Cloudflare assisted by taking down infrastructure outside U.S. jurisdiction, while HealthISAC quantified impacts on healthcare organizations. SpyCloud contributed key victimology data, Resecurity facilitated access to Tycoon 2FA, and Coinbase helped trace the movement of stolen funds. Finally, the Shadowserver Foundation supported notifications to more than 200 computer emergency response teams worldwide, helping limit further harm. 

No single organization could have assembled this full picture alone.

Splash page appearing on seized domains.

Sustaining pressure, together 

Stopping identitybased cybercrime requires action across individuals, organizations, and governments. Multifactor authentication, scrutiny of unexpected messages, strong session controls, and coordinated threatsharing all reduce risk. Early enforcement matters tooit prevents small intrusions from escalating into systemic harm. Microsoft will continue applying the lessons learned from Tycoon 2FA and prior disruptions to fragment the impersonation economy, limit scale, and make cybercrime riskier and less profitable. 

The post Defending the gates: How a global coalition disrupted Tycoon 2FA, a major driver of initial access and large-scale online impersonation appeared first on Microsoft On the Issues.

Microsoft disrupts global cybercrime subscription service responsible for millions in fraud losses

14 January 2026 at 16:02

Today, Microsoft is announcing a coordinated legal action in the United States and, for the first time, the United Kingdom to disrupt RedVDS, a global cybercrime subscription service fueling millions in fraud losses. These efforts are part of a broader joint operation with international law enforcement, including German authorities and Europol, which has allowed Microsoft and its partners to seize key malicious infrastructure and take the RedVDS marketplace offlinea major step toward dismantling the networks behind AI-enabled fraud, such as real estate scams. 

For as little as US $24 a month, RedVDS provides criminals with access to disposable virtual computers that make fraud cheap, scalable, and difficult to trace. Services like these have quietly become a driving force behind todays surge in cyberenabled crime, powering attacks that harm individuals, businesses, and communities worldwide. Since March 2025, RedVDSenabled activity has driven roughly US $40 million in reported fraud losses in the United States alone. Among the victims is H2-Pharma, an Alabamabased pharmaceutical company that lost more than $7.3 million  money supposed to be used to sustain lifesaving cancer treatments, mental health medications, and childrens allergy drugs  for patients across the country. In a separate case, the Gatehouse Dock Condominium Association in Florida was tricked out of nearly $500,000funds contributed by residents and property owners for essential repairs. Both organizations are joining Microsoft as coplaintiffs in this civil action. 

But these cases represent only a fraction of the harm. Fraud and scams frequently go unreported, victims are global, and cybercriminals routinely pivot across platforms and service providers. For the individual, fraud has lasting effects that extend beyond financial loss to emotional wellbeing, health, relationships, and long-term stability. As a result, the true toll of RedVDS‑enabled activity is far higher than the roughly US $40 million Microsoft can directly observe.

What RedVDS is—and why it matters

RedVDS is an online subscription service that is part of the growing cybercrime-as-a-service ecosystem where cybercriminals buy and sell services and tools to launch attacks at scale. It provides access to cheap, effective, and disposable virtual computers running unlicensed software, including Windows, allowing criminals to operate quickly, anonymously, and across borders.

A dashboard-style webpage from a server management platform called RED VDS. The interface shows a dark-themed control panel with navigation options on the left, including Dashboard, My Servers, Tasks, Transactions, Settings, Telegram Bot, Order New Server, Child Panel, and more. The main area displays details for a virtual dedicated server, including its IP address, hardware specifications, billing cycle, status, and next due date. Action buttons allow starting, rebooting, powering off, fixing network issues, checking server status, changing passwords and IP, wiping or reinstalling, and terminating the server. Additional sections show server information tables and recent task logs.
A screenshot of RedVDS’s user dashboard, including a loyalty program and referral bonuses for customers.

Cybercriminals use RedVDS for a wide range of activities, including sending high‑volume phishing emails, hosting scam infrastructure, and facilitating fraud schemes. RedVDS is frequently paired with generative AI tools that help identify high‑value targets faster and generate more realistic, multimedia message email threads that mimic legitimate correspondences. In hundreds of cases, Microsoft observed attackers further augment their deception by leveraging face-swapping, video manipulation, and voice cloning AI tools to impersonate individuals and deceive victims.

In just one month, more than 2,600 distinct RedVDS virtual machines sent an average of one million phishing messages per day to Microsoft customers alone. While most were blocked or flagged as part of the 600 million cyberattacks Microsoft blocks per day, the sheer volume meant a small percentage may have succeeded in reaching the targets’ inboxes. Since September 2025, RedVDS‑enabled attacks have led to the compromise or fraudulent access of more than 191,000 organizations worldwide. These figures represent only a subset of the impacted accounts across all technology providers, illustrating how quickly this infrastructure increases the scale of cyberattacks.

Digital dashboard screenshot from RedVDS client area showing server management interface. The page displays a dark-themed control panel with navigation menu on the left and main panels detailing server specifications (IP address, CPU, RAM, disk, OS), billing cycle, and status. Action buttons for starting, rebooting, powering off, fixing network issues, and terminating the server appear on the right. Below, tables list server information and recent tasks with timestamps and completion status.
Global density of compromised Microsoft email accounts using RedVDS from September 2025 through December 2025. The top five impacted countries are the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, France, and India.

How RedVDS enables fraud

One of the most common ways RedVDS‑enabled attacks result in financial loss is through payment diversion fraud, also known as business email compromise, or “BEC.” In these schemes, attackers gain unauthorized access to email accounts, quietly monitor ongoing conversations, and wait for the right moment, such as an upcoming payment or wire transfer. At that point, they impersonate a trusted party and redirect funds, often moving the money within seconds. Both H2-Pharma and the Gatehouse Dock Condominium Association were targeted through sophisticated BEC schemes that exploited trust and timing.

BEC attack chain powered by RedVDS.

 

Sample impersonation email with fraudulent payment instructions.

RedVDS has also been heavily used to facilitate real estate payment diversion scams, one of the fastest‑growing forms of cyber‑enabled fraud. In these cases, attackers compromise the accounts of realtors, escrow agents, or title companies and send strategically timed emails with fraudulent payment instructions designed to divert closing funds, escrow payments, and other sizeable transactions. For families and first altogether. Microsoft has observed RedVDS‑enabled activity affecting more than 9,000 customers in the real estate sector alone, with particularly severe impact in countries such as Canada and Australia.

And the threat goes far beyond real estate. RedVDS‑enabled scams have hit construction, manufacturing, healthcare, logistics, education, legal services, and many other sectors—disrupting everything from production lines to patient .

A Global Response to a Global Threat

Cybercrime today is powered by shared infrastructure, which means disrupting individual attackers is not enough. Through this coordinated action, Microsoft has disrupted RedVDS’s operations, including seizing two domains that host the RedVDS marketplace and customer portal, while also laying the groundwork to identify the individuals behind them.

Microsoft’s legal actions are reinforced by close collaboration with law enforcement partners around the world, further disrupting the malicious operation. Germany’s Public Prosecutor’s Office Frankfurt am Main – Central Office for Combating Internet Crime (ZIT) and the German State Criminal Police Office Brandenburg have seized a critical server used to power RedVDS, effectively taking its central marketplace offline. At the same time and as part of this ongoing disruption, Microsoft is also working closely with international law enforcement, including Europol’s European Cybercrime Centre (EC3), to disrupt the broader network of servers and payment networks that supported RedVDS customers as part of the ongoing disruption.What people and organizations can do

We are deeply grateful to H2 -Pharma and the Gatehouse Dock Condominium Association for their willingness to come forward and share their experiences. Their cooperation, combined with Microsoft’s threat intelligence, made this action possible and will help protect future victims. Falling victim to a scam should never carry stigma. These attacks are executed by organized, professional criminal groups that intercept and manipulate legitimate communications between trusted parties.

Simple steps can significantly reduce risk, including slowing down and questioning urgency, calling points of contact back using numbers that are already known to you, verifying payment requests using additional contact information, enabling multifactor authentication, watching carefully for subtle changes in email addresses, keeping software up to date, and reporting suspicious activity to law enforcement. Every report helps dismantle networks like RedVDS and brings us closer to stopping cybercrime at scale.

Continuing a collective effort to disrupt cybercrime

This action against RedVDS builds on Microsoft’s ongoing efforts to disrupt fraud and scam infrastructure through legal and technical action, collaboration with law enforcement, and participation in global initiatives such as the National Cyber-Forensics and Training Alliance (NCFTA) and the Global Anti-Scam Alliance (GASA). It marks the 35th civil action targeting cybercrime infrastructure by Microsoft’s Digital Crimes Unit, underscoring a sustained strategy to go beyond individual takedowns and dismantle the services that criminals rely on to operate and scale.

As services like RedVDS continue to emerge, Microsoft will keep working with partners across sectors and borders to identify and disrupt the infrastructure behind cyber-enabled fraud, making it harder for criminals to profit and easier for people and organizations to stay safe online.

 

 

 

 

 

 

The post Microsoft disrupts global cybercrime subscription service responsible for millions in fraud losses appeared first on Microsoft On the Issues.

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