Cybercrime
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Endpoint Security
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Fraud Management & Cybercrime
Russian, Kazakh Hackers Charged in $46M Proxy Botnet Scheme

U.S. federal prosecutors charged four hackers from Russia and Kazakhstan with conspiracy and computer crimes after they allegedly made more than $46 million by selling access to infected routers tied to a global botnet.
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The Department of Justice announced Friday it had seized the domains Anyproxy.net and 5socks.net after court documents revealed the sites had sold thousands of proxies worldwide and in the United States since 2004. FBI investigators in Oklahoma City found local residential and business routers had been infected with malware without users’ knowledge, allowing them to be reconfigured and sold as proxy servers on the sites.
An indictment charges Russian nationals Alexey Viktorovich Chertkov, 37, Kirill Vladimirovich Morozov, 41, Aleksandr Aleksandrovich Shishkin, 36, and Dmitriy Rubtsov, 38, a Kazakhstani national, with infecting older-model wireless internet routers worldwide and selling access through subscription fees ranging from $9.95 to $110 per month. Prosecutors also charged Chertkov and Rubtsov with using falsified information to register and operate the domains that enabled the scheme.
The hackers carried out key parts of the scheme, according to the indictment, including identifying vulnerable wireless routers, installing malicious code and enabling customers to access protected computer systems and networks through the Anyproxy botnet. The indictment also said they used Russian internet hosting provider JCS Fedora Communications to register and manage the Anyproxy.net and 5socks.net domains.
A fact sheet said U.S. law enforcement seized the domains and secured the indictments with help from the Dutch National Police – Amsterdam Region, the Netherlands Public Prosecution Service, the Royal Thai Police and other state, local and private sector partners. The FBI worked with foreign law enforcement to seize and disable the botnet overseas, according to the fact sheet.
The FBI has led several global botnet takedowns in recent years, including a 2024 international operation that dismantled the 911 S5 botnet, which had turned residential computers into proxies for fraud. Authorities described it as one of the largest botnets ever disrupted (see: FBI Says It Dismantled ‘Likely the World’s Largest Botnet’).