Bangladesh Bank, NY Fed Discuss Suing Manila Bank For Heist Damages (reuters.com) 29
An anonymous reader shares a report: Bangladesh's central bank has asked the Federal Reserve Bank of New York to join a lawsuit it plans to file against a Philippines bank for its role in one of the world's biggest cyber-heists, several sources said. The Fed is yet to respond formally, but there is no indication it would join the suit. Unidentified hackers stole $81 million from Bangladesh Bank's account at the New York Fed in February last year, using fraudulent orders on the SWIFT payments system. The money was sent to accounts at Manila-based Rizal Commercial Banking Corp and then disappeared into the casino industry in the Philippines.
Sounds like a good movie plot (Score:2)
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Well, one reason for it to be modded that way is that few in the US know much about the Philippines, but they've definitely got opinions about Trump.
Real meaning of SWIFT (Score:1)
Suspicous wired inter-bank financial transaction
Precedent (Score:1, Interesting)
What court would hear this case? Philippines has already issued fines. If individuals (non-officers) within the bank choose to collude, can the bank be responsible if they meet minimum infosec requirements/regulations? And it's not like there are international cyber security regulations anyway. At the time, SWIFT was punk and didn't even strong recommend MFA.
The need for an international court or tribunal, similar to maritime, is obviously necessary. But it will remain unadopted with the United States actin
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You clearly have strong opinions about how the singularity will manifest...and that's in direct opposition to the very concept.
The Technological Singularity is incredibly dangerous to humanity, and if we could depend on rational humans running things I'd be strongly in favor of avoiding it. Unfortunately, it may be our best hope for surviving the century, but I put our odds of surviving it at no more than around 60%.
Re:Precedent (Score:5, Insightful)
If someone at the Philippines bank facilitated a theft from the Bangladesh bank, then the Bangladesh people can and SHOULD sue the Philippine bank.
Even if some people at the Bangladesh bank also facilitated the theft.
If your neighbor's son helps your son steal from you, damn right you would want your neighbor to at least partially reimburse you for the damage.
Even if you are talking 10%, that's a lot of money.
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Nope, he is DEFINITELY liable. Of course, I meant that the son was underage (Your neighbor is not liable if the son was 40 years old).
The only question is how much he is liable. Consider a case where two ten year old boys steal one of their father's cars and crash it. If the one who was driving was not the son of the owner, I assure you the insurance company will go after the father that did not own the car. Even if the other boy stole the keys, the one that was driving will have to pay. (or rather hi
It was an inside job. (Score:2, Informative)
It was pulled off with insiders in the bank. They knew the exact process. Orders and acknowledgements were printed and kept track of. They first disabled the printer with some innocuous manner. It is possible they caused the same failure a few times before to stop them from getting suspicious. Then on a Friday, sent the money transfer orders. Acknowledgement was stuck in the print spool. NY Fed released the funds
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Is your claim just your personal opinion or backed by some investigation.
ALL my claims are personal opinion. Sometimes it will be based on some trustworthy news source. Other times not.
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Maybe Bangladesh is just trying to recover its money.
After all, even if they arrest the officers of the bank, give them a trial, convict them, etc., it's possible that they may never be able to recover the full amount. It's likely that there were other partners involved in receiving the money.
Re:Why is this an issue (Score:4, Interesting)
*I suspect that some group within SWIFT knew the Bangladesh's central bank had terrible security and were looking at all transactions above a certain amount without telling the Bangladesh's central bank. It's just too lucky that someone just happened to notice something fishy. Central banks move hundreds of millions regularly to stabilize currency or to facilitate large state transactions. Their wasn't anything suspicious about these.
Why is North Korea suddenly popular to blame (Score:3)