Cybersecurity News in Asia

RECENT STORIES:

SEGA moves faster with flow-based network monitoring
Study: Cyber resilience in APAC foundational but not future-ready
Popular PC utility website served malware-laced installers for 19 hour...
Fake crypto app on official app store drains US$9.5M from 50 victims
Tsingke Unveils ‘Zero-Contact’ Gene Synthesis to Safeguard...
How pitfalls in evaluating Web Application Firewalls can raise costs a...
LOGIN REGISTER
CybersecAsia
  • Features
    • Featured

      How AI is supercharging insider threats

      How AI is supercharging insider threats

      Wednesday, April 15, 2026, 12:29 PM Asia/Singapore | Features
    • Featured

      Q-Day is coming. Are you ready?

      Q-Day is coming. Are you ready?

      Tuesday, April 14, 2026, 12:40 PM Asia/Singapore | Features
    • Featured

      How lean defence teams turn endpoint insights into measurable risk reduction

      How lean defence teams turn endpoint insights into measurable risk reduction

      Monday, April 13, 2026, 3:15 PM Asia/Singapore | Features
  • Opinions
  • Tips
  • Whitepapers
  • Awards 2025
  • Directory
  • E-Learning

Select Page

News

Ransomware group exposed as a fake-breach scam operation

By CybersecAsia editors | Thursday, February 12, 2026, 10:25 AM Asia/Singapore

Ransomware group exposed as a fake-breach scam operation

Multiple security researchers are concluding that victim lists and data leaks are fabrications, with no real intrusions evidenced.

A newly emerged cybercrime group calling itself 0APT has been exposed as probably a scam operation that never actually breached most of the organizations it claimed to have compromised, according to multiple security researchers.

The group surfaced on 28 January this year and rapidly listed more than 200 alleged victims on its dark web leak site, only to vanish briefly in early February before reappearing with a shorter roster of roughly 15 multinational organizations.

Among the names listed was Epworth HealthCare, Victoria’s largest private hospital group, which the group claimed had leaked 920 gigabytes of sensitive clinical and billing information. Epworth stated it had found no verified evidence of a breach, and that specialist partners had detected no compromise of its systems.

Analysts also noted that 0APT has included obviously fictional entities, such as a “Metropolis City Municipal” apparently inspired by DC Comics, before quietly removing them to appear more credible.

Threat researcher analyses
One firm — GuidePoint Security — has assessed with high confidence that 0APT’s victim lists are a mix of completely invented company names and real organizations that were never breached, noting there is no evidence the group has successfully intruded into these entities’ networks. In at least two cases where firms engaged incident‑response teams, investigators found no indicators of compromise, ransom notes, or any signs of a real attack.

Another firm, DataBreaches.net (and others cybersecurity researchers) has discovered that 0APT’s supposed “data dumps” were not stolen files but infinite streams of random binary noise, likely piped directly from the Unix /dev/random source to victims’ browsers, creating the illusion of large encrypted archives. The files, often advertised as tens of gigabytes, were in fact unstructured digital static with no internal emails, customer records, or meaningful corporate data.

Researchers have also pointed out that 0APT’s playbook closely resembles that of earlier fraud groups:

  • The operation initially demands a 1‑bitcoin “security bond” from would‑be affiliates, a tactic previously used by the 2024 Mogilevich scam, whose operators later confessed to being “professional fraudsters” who had defrauded other cybercriminals out of about US$85,000.
  • Similar patterns are seen in the RansomedVC group, which researcher Jon DiMaggio had documented as fabricating stolen data to extort victims.

While analysts currently treat 0APT as a largely fabricated threat, they nevertheless warn that the underlying actors could still launch genuine attacks in the future. Organizations affected should verify any ransomware claims through technical evidence rather than leak‑site listings alone.

Share:

PreviousMalicious cybercriminals are tapping aggressive strategies in 2026
NextShould we worry about AI agents taking over our world?

Related Posts

Data protection and backup solutions: when less is more

Data protection and backup solutions: when less is more

Thursday, April 1, 2021

Apple iOS developers, what have you done?

Apple iOS developers, what have you done?

Monday, January 10, 2022

Why the world needs alternatives to GPS technology yesterday

Why the world needs alternatives to GPS technology yesterday

Monday, June 27, 2022

Understanding the lifecycle of a compromised email account

Understanding the lifecycle of a compromised email account

Monday, July 27, 2020

Leave a reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Voters-draw/RCA-Sponsors

Slide
Slide
Slide
Slide
Slide
Slide
Slide
Slide
Slide
Slide
Slide
Slide
Slide
Slide
previous arrow
next arrow

CybersecAsia Voting Placement

Gamification listing or Participate Now

PARTICIPATE NOW

Vote Now -Placement(Google Ads)

Top-Sidebar-banner

Whitepapers

  • Closing the Gap in Email Security:How To Stop The 7 Most SinisterAI-Powered Phishing Threats

    Closing the Gap in Email Security:How To Stop The 7 Most SinisterAI-Powered Phishing Threats

    Insider threats continue to be a major cybersecurity risk in 2024. Explore more insights on …Download Whitepaper
  • 2024 Insider Threat Report: Trends, Challenges, and Solutions

    2024 Insider Threat Report: Trends, Challenges, and Solutions

    Insider threats continue to be a major cybersecurity risk in 2024. Explore more insights on …Download Whitepaper
  • AI-Powered Cyber Ops: Redefining Cloud Security for 2025

    AI-Powered Cyber Ops: Redefining Cloud Security for 2025

    The future of cybersecurity is a perfect storm: AI-driven attacks, cloud expansion, and the convergence …Download Whitepaper
  • Data Management in the Age of Cloud and AI

    Data Management in the Age of Cloud and AI

    In today’s Asia Pacific business environment, organizations are leaning on hybrid multi-cloud infrastructures and advanced …Download Whitepaper

Middle-sidebar-banner

Case Studies

  • Cyber protection for medical clinics in Singapore

    Cyber protection for medical clinics in Singapore

    As Singapore’s healthcare sector becomes increasingly digital and interconnected, clinics are facing heightened cyber risks, …Read more
  • India’s WazirX strengthens governance and digital asset security

    India’s WazirX strengthens governance and digital asset security

    Revamping its custody infrastructure using multi‑party computation tools has improved operational resilience and institutional‑grade safeguardsRead more
  • Bangladesh LGED modernizes communication while addressing data security concerns

    Bangladesh LGED modernizes communication while addressing data security concerns

    To meet emerging data localization/privacy regulations, the government engineering agency deploys a secure, unified digital …Read more
  • What AI worries keep members of the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners sleepless?

    What AI worries keep members of the Association of Certified Fraud Examiners sleepless?

    This case study examines how many anti-fraud professionals reported feeling underprepared to counter rising AI-driven …Read more

Bottom sidebar

Other News

  • Tsingke Unveils ‘Zero-Contact’ Gene Synthesis to Safeguard Core Genetic Sequences

    Wednesday, April 15, 2026
    BEIJING, April 15, 2026 /PRNewswire/ …Read More »
  • NEC Asia Pacific to Showcase Trusted Public Safety and Digital Identity Innovations at Milipol TechX 2026

    Wednesday, April 15, 2026
    SINGAPORE, April 14, 2026 /PRNewswire/ …Read More »
  • Sprinto Expands to Australia with New Data Center to Power Localized, Audit-Ready Compliance

    Wednesday, April 15, 2026
    Sprinto combines local infrastructure with …Read More »
  • Hong Kong Anti-graft Watchdog: Clean Governance and Ethical Business is Key to Hong Kong’s Sustainable Business Development

    Thursday, April 9, 2026
    HONG KONG, April 9, 2026 …Read More »
  • Goodix Launches the World’s First eSE Solution Designed for AI Agents

    Thursday, April 9, 2026
    SHENZHEN, China, April 8, 2026 …Read More »
  • Our Brands
  • DigiconAsia
  • MartechAsia
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Sitemap
  • Privacy & Cookies
  • Terms of Use
  • Advertising & Reprint Policy
  • Media Kit
  • Subscribe
  • Manage Subscriptions
  • Newsletter

Copyright © 2026 CybersecAsia All Rights Reserved.