Vulkan, designer of digital weapons for the Russian services, sanctioned by the European Union

Russian company NTS Vulkan has been added to the list of companies and individuals subject to EU sanctions for their role, direct or indirect, in the invasion of Ukraine, according to Friday, June 23 edition of Official newspaper of the European Union.

The firm is sanctioned for its links with the FSB (Russian internal security services): the European Union says that Vulkan holds “a license issued by the FSB”adding that this license is “issued to IT companies that develop encryption, data management or intelligence gathering technologies” for Russian state services. The document notes that the tools developed under this license can be used to collect “large amounts of data obtained for example by scraping social media”.

An extensive international survey

At the end of March, The worldin collaboration with several international media including the Guardian and the washington posthad revealed internal documents of this discreet Russian subcontractor, within the framework of a vast investigation coordinated by Paper Trail Media. These files showed how this company had developed, on behalf of various Russian intelligence services, computer tools intended for cyberoffensive campaigns.

Read also: Article reserved for our subscribers Behind the scenes of Vulkan, the cyber armory of the Russian services

One of these projects, baptized Amezit, probably designed for the FSB, contained, for example, sophisticated software for creating and managing fake accounts on social networks, in order to carry out influence campaigns, mainly Russian-speaking but also targeting countries close to Russia. The investigations of World in particular made it possible to link this tool to an attempt to destabilize elections in Armenia in 2017.

Another major Vulkan project revealed by the investigation of the World and its partners is called Skan: it was a tool designed to collect a large amount of public information on digital infrastructures in order to prepare for potential cyberattacks – a tool possibly developed for Russian military intelligence (GRU).

The world

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