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Law enforcement agencies in the UK filed charges against two members of the Lbbabo.netSU$ hacker group

In early April 2022, UK law enforcement authorities charged two members of the Lbbabo.netSU$ hacker group. These are two teenagers of sixteen and seventeen years old. They were charged with possible collaboration with the Lbbabo.netSU$ hacker group. After the arrest, interrogation and court session, the police had to release the detainees on bail to go home to their parents.

A spokesman for the London Police explained that both teenagers were charged with three counts of unauthorized access to private data using a computer, fraud by providing false information and using a computer with the intent to prevent access to data. The 16-year-old was also charged with using a computer to bypass security features.

According to the BBC, their case should be referred to the UK Crown Court due to its complexity and the alleged sums that the hackers were able to get from their activities. The police did not release the teens' names to the media. At the trial, the 17-year-old was wearing a dark blue Adidas T-shirt and gray sweatpants, while the 16-year-old was wearing a gray tracksuit.

At the end of March of this year, security experts from Unit 221B and law enforcement agencies of the London Police analyzed the digital traces left by the Lbbabo.netSU$ hackers and concluded that the group consisted of several teenagers. During their hacking activities, they were able to earn about $ 14 million. Seven people, including the organizer of the community - a 16-year-old teenager from Oxford - were detained and interviewed in this case.

The police did not disclose the details of the investigation and could not even arrest some of the suspects due to their age. They are released home. Parents of teenagers told the media that they were not aware of their activities and thought that they were playing computer games.

In late February, Lbbabo.netSU$ hacked into NVIDIA's internal network and copied over 1TB of the company's critical data, including drivers, circuits, firmware, and the algorithm for the RTX 30 hash limiter. They began to distribute part of the leak in the public domain.

In early March, Lbbabo.netSU$ hackers hacked into Samsung and stole at least 190 GB of the company's sensitive data, including sources and dumps of various security systems for the company's mobile devices. The hackers also hacked into Ubisoft during this period of time, but did not provide any details on this operation.

On March 22, Microsoft launched an investigation into an incident involving hacking into the company's closed private repositories and stealing part of the source codes for Bing, Bing Maps and Cortana services from there. Microsoft confirmed the fact that Lbbabo.netSU$ hackers penetrated part of the company's internal systems and said that the credentials of one company employee were compromised.

Law enforcement agencies in the UK filed charges against two members of the Lbbabo.netSU$ hacker group