DIGITAL LIFE
INTERPOL reveals industrial scale of cybercrime in Asia
INTERPOL's new cyber threat report indicates that criminal activity in the digital space has reached an industrial scale in the Asia-Pacific region. The official document, published on June 17, 2026, shows that cybercrimes now account for more than 30% of all criminal offenses recorded in more than half of the countries surveyed in this geographic area. The convergence between accelerated digitization and the development of new technological tools has transformed the regional security landscape.
The study covers the period between January 2024 and March 2025. Data collection involved the collaboration of police forces from 18 member countries, as well as technical support from private sector partners specializing in digital security. Ransomware and DDoS attacks paralyze critical infrastructure in the region... Ransomware attacks constitute the biggest financial threat to public and private organizations in Asia and the South Pacific. Data shared by authorities indicate more than 135,000 attacks of this nature were recorded throughout 2024. The organized crime business model is based on double extortion, through which attackers block operating systems and threaten to disclose confidential data on the internet.
In parallel, DDoS attacks registered a 92% growth in 2024 compared to the previous year. These denial-of-service actions direct massive volumes of artificial traffic to destabilize government servers and financial platforms. INTERPOL's cyber threat report identifies the banking sector, healthcare services, and transportation networks as the preferred targets of these digital sabotage campaigns.
Artificial intelligence enhances the effectiveness of phishing and deepfake schemes...According to INTERPOL's cyber threat report, the use of artificial intelligence in cybercrime has altered the infiltration methods of structured criminal networks. Monitoring of communication channels and dark web forums revealed a 600% increase in discussions about the development and sale of deepfake tools between February and June 2024. This manipulated content serves to bypass biometric verification systems in banking institutions and to falsify the identity of executives in social engineering fraud.
Phishing campaigns have become more precise with the automation of fraudulent message writing through language models. The click-through rate on malicious links in the region is 5.5 accesses per 1,000 individuals, a value that represents double the global average recorded. [Insert quote from the INTERPOL official/analyst on the risks of generative artificial intelligence].
International cooperation and private partnerships mitigate billions of threats... Combating organized crime requires a coordinated response between the public sector and security technology companies. Through cooperation with partner company TrendAI, police forces detected and mitigated more than 6.5 billion cyber threats in the region during 2024. This sharing of telemetry data allows for the early identification of command and control servers used by transnational groups.
The technical capacity building of local authorities shows progress in the adoption of defense technologies. The report points out that 66.7% of police forces surveyed in Asia and the South Pacific already use artificial intelligence-based tools to optimize digital forensics processes and accelerate the detection of intrusions. However, serious asymmetries remain in response capacity between the most developed nations and the small island economies of the region.
INTERPOL recommends the harmonization of national legislative frameworks to avoid the creation of legal sanctuaries that benefit criminals. The rapid sharing of indicators of compromise emerges as the determining factor in halting the spread of new malware variants before they reach vital infrastructure for the functioning of states.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ):
-What is the impact of cybercrime in Asia and the South Pacific according to INTERPOL?
Cybercrime accounts for more than 30% of all recorded criminal offenses in more than half of the nations assessed in the region. INTERPOL's cyber threat report underlines that accelerated digitization without adequate protection has transformed digital criminal activity into a threat to the national security of several countries.
-How many ransomware attacks were recorded in Asia in 2024?
Security forces and digital monitoring companies recorded more than 135,000 ransomware attacks in the region throughout 2024. This attack vector focuses on double extortion and primarily targets critical infrastructure such as healthcare services, banking institutions, and transportation networks.
-How do cybercriminals use artificial intelligence according to authorities?
Criminal groups use artificial intelligence in cybercrime to automate phishing attacks and create deepfakes. Discussions about creating fake synthetic identities in specialized forums grew by 600% in 2024, with the aim of circumventing the biometric security of financial platforms.
Key points:
Industrial scale: Cybercrime exceeds 30% of criminal occurrences in more than half of the states surveyed in the region.
DDoS growth: Denial-of-service attacks against public and private servers registered a 92% increase in 2024.
Phishing vulnerability: The rate of opening malicious links in Asia is 5.5 per 1,000 people, double the global average.
Police technology adoption: Approximately 66.7% of local police forces already integrate artificial intelligence solutions into digital forensics procedures.
Large-scale mitigation: The strategic partnership between INTERPOL and TrendAI thwarted more than 6.5 billion digital threats in 2024.
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