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When successful, iServer customers would receive the credentials through the web interface. The customers could then unlock a phone to disable the lost mode so the device could be used by someone new.
The man behind the network has reportedly been active since 2018, and developed a phishing-as-a-service platform, ‘iServer’, which allowed criminals to unlock stolen phones.
Sep 25, 2024 06:00:00 'iServer', which was phishing for authentication information to unlock 1.2 million stolen smartphones, is closed. Europol has announced that it has dismantled an ...
A joint law enforcement operation has dismantled an international criminal network that used the iServer automated phishing-as-a-service platform to unlock the stolen or lost mobile phones of ...
The iServer phishing-as-a-service platform, which was active for five years, is reported by law enforcement investigators to have targeted over 1.2-million mobile phones, and claimed approximately ...
The iServer phishing-as-a-service platform, which was active for five years, is reported by law enforcement investigators to have targeted over 1.2-million mobile phones, and claimed approximately 483 ...