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PRIVACY
Economic Development

West Midlands Police push to educate firms about cyber crime

Police have launched an urgent initiative to try to counter the rise in highly sophisticated cyber-criminals targeting West Midlands firms.

Police have launched an urgent initiative to try to counter the rise in highly sophisticated cyber-criminals targeting West Midlands firms.

Officers from the have been visiting firms across the region based on intelligence received from the National Crime Agency.

The NCA says º£½ÇÊÓÆµ-based servers have been compromised more than 5,500 times and are now being used by criminals to send out spam email, launch attacks against websites or servers, or install phishing websites to gain access to sensitive information.

The Birmingham Post revealed as long ago as 2013 that some city companies had been targeted by crooks who had taken over their systems and were blackmailing them to be allowed access.

Police have admitted they are struggling to cope with the huge increase in attacks, with the response hit by funding cuts.

In January this year, the region’s police and crime commissioner David Jamieson said massive funding reductions were hitting the force’s ability to tackle terrorism and the growing threat of online crime.

Commissioner Jamieson said: “We are kidding ourselves as a society if we believe crime is falling. What’s happening is that crime is changing. You’re not likely to get mugged on the street any more, but you get mugged online instead.

“We’re seeing a fall in traditional crime, such as car crime or burglary, business. Nationally, and in the West Midlands, we are barely beginning to touch the surface of these types of crimes.”