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Threat IntelligenceJun 22, 2026

INTERPOL Warns Phishing, Ransomware, and AI Scams Are Rising Across Asia-Pacific

INTERPOL reports a dramatic rise in cybercrime across Asia-Pacific, driven by AI, ransomware, and phishing.

Summary

INTERPOL's latest report indicates a significant surge in cybercrime across the Asia-Pacific region, attributed to increased digitalization, organized criminal networks, and a growing reliance on AI. Phishing remains the most prevalent and financially damaging cybercrime, with ransomware attacks also escalating, particularly impacting real estate, manufacturing, and financial services. The report also highlights the use of AI and deepfakes in sophisticated scams, including romance baiting and executive impersonation, leading to substantial financial losses.

Full text

INTERPOL Warns Phishing, Ransomware, and AI Scams Are Rising Across Asia-Pacific Ravie LakshmananJun 22, 2026Cybercrime / Artificial Intelligence A new report from INTERPOL has revealed a "dramatic increase" in cybercrime in Asia and the South Pacific, fueled by rapid digitalization, internet penetration, new technologies, organized criminal networks, and a disparity in cybersecurity maturity. According to INTERPOL's 2025/2026 Asia and South Pacific Cyberthreat Assessment Report, phishing has emerged as the most widespread and financially damaging form of cybercrime, with a third of countries in the region reporting more than 10,000 cases between January 2024 and March 2025. In all, over half of INTERPOL member countries have reported that cybercrime accounted for no less than 30% of all crimes recorded nationally. "The findings in this report highlight a rapidly evolving cyber threat landscape across Asia and the South Pacific, where cybercriminals are leveraging artificial intelligence, ransomware-as-a-service models and sophisticated social engineering techniques on an industrial scale," Neal Jetton, INTERPOL Cybercrime Director, said in a statement. "As digital adoption accelerates across the region, strengthening operational cooperation, information sharing, and cyber resilience remains essential to protecting communities and critical infrastructure." The growing sophistication of cybercriminal tradecraft has led to a surge in ransomware attacks, as well as deepfake and artificial intelligence (AI)-driven scams that involve impersonating business executives to authorize fraudulent transactions. The region is estimated to have registered more than 135,000 ransomware-related attacks in 2024. A vast majority of the incidents impacted the real estate, manufacturing, and financial services sectors. This has been complemented by the industrialization of cyber-enabled scams by transnational organized crime syndicates in countries like Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, and the Philippines, who have set up extensive scam centers that make use of forced labor to carry out investment scams, preying on people across the world after building friendly or romantic relationships with them. "Organized crime in Myanmar, Cambodia, and Laos used deepfakes in 'romance baiting' scams, blending AI personas and social engineering to fuel $37 billion in regional cybercrime losses," INTERPOL said. Some of the other regional trends captured by the report include the following - Banking trojans and information stealers materialized as the second most prevalent type of cybercrime, with malware families like RedLine, Lumma, LokiBot, Negasteal, and ZBot taking up the top spots. 5.5 out of every 1,000 individuals in the Asia and South Pacific region clicked on phishing links monthly, nearly double the global average of 2.9 per 1,000. Distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks surged by 92% in 2024 compared to the previous year. System intrusions accounted for approximately 80% of all data breaches in 2024. Use of deepfake technology for sexual exploitation, blackmail, or coercion. Exploitation of misconfigured systems, weak encryption, insecure APIs, and insufficient monitoring to breach target networks. Ransomware groups weaponize companies' regulatory obligations to intensify pressure during extortion attempts. "In response, law enforcement organizations across the region – supported by INTERPOL – are scaling up joint efforts to combat cybercrime," INTERPOL said. "These include the coordination of operations against cybercriminal infrastructure, collaborative investigations, specialized training initiatives, and the creation of policies to improve cyber resilience." Found this article interesting? Follow us on Google News, Twitter and LinkedIn to read more exclusive content we post. SHARE     Tweet Share Share Share SHARE  artificial intelligence, Cybercrime, ddos, Deepfake, Information Stealer, Interpol, Malware, Phishing, ransomware ⚡ Top Stories This Week Chrome V8 Zero-Day CVE-2026-11645 Exploited in the Wild - Patch Now Researchers Build Self-Replicating AI Worm That Operates Entirely on Local, Open-Weight Models Microsoft Defender RoguePlanet Zero-Day Grants SYSTEM Access on Updated Windows Anthropic Releases Claude Fable 5, Its Most Powerful AI Yet, With Cyber Safeguards Microsoft Patches Record 206 Flaws, Including Three Zero-Days and Critical RCE Bugs Ivanti, Fortinet, and SAP Release Patches for Multiple Critical Vulnerabilities Cybersecurity Stars Awards 2026: Winners Announced Across 95 Categories ThreatsDay Bulletin: Worm Code Leaked, AI Agent Phished, Claude Code Patch + 28 New Stories New GreatXML Exploit Bypasses Windows BitLocker via Recovery Partition XML Files Agentjacking Attack Tricks AI Coding Agents Into Running Malicious Code China-Linked Hackers Backdoored Linux Login Software to Hide for Nearly a Decade Critical Splunk Enterprise Flaw Lets Attackers Run Code Without Authentication U.S. Orders Anthropic to Suspend Fable 5 and Mythos 5 Access for Foreign Nationals Over 400 Arch Linux AUR Packages Hijacked to Deploy Infostealer and eBPF Rootkit Palo Alto Warns of Active Exploitation of PAN-OS GlobalProtect VPN Flaw ⚡ Weekly Recap: Chrome 0-Day, UniFi Exploits, macOS Stealers, VPN Flaw and More ⭐ Featured Resources Get the 2026 Guide to Govern and Secure Enterprise AI Agents at Scale [Watch Demo] See Which Security Gaps Attackers Could Exploit First AI Can’t Stop Every Attack. 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Indicators of Compromise

  • malware — RedLine
  • malware — Lumma
  • malware — LokiBot
  • malware — Negasteal
  • malware — ZBot

Entities

Artificial Intelligence (technology)Phishing (technology)Ransomware (technology)Deepfake (technology)DDoS (technology)