Gangsters will remember his name for a long time: a Lithuanian from the FBI and Europol eliminated a huge network of criminals.



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On March 10 this year, Europol announced that it had successfully hacked and unlocked the Sky ECC encryption program together with various law enforcement agencies in Belgium, France, and the Netherlands. Law enforcement officials have officially announced that approximately 70,000 consumers in Europe have been tracking correspondence since mid-February this year. Massive searches in Belgium and the Netherlands have led to the arrest of an impressive number of particularly serious criminals and carefully planned individuals from different criminal groups.

Europol representatives do not hide the fact that it is one of the most important operations in history, with international criminals arrested through a correspondence application. There is no doubt that Lithuanian citizens were among the correspondents. But the most interesting thing is that the Lithuanian Edvardas Šileris, who has been working as director of the Cybercrime Center at Europol’s headquarters in The Hague for almost a year, also made a significant contribution to this extraordinary operation.

Video cameras in shops, on the streets, at the entrances to buildings. Payment, regular customer, door opening cards. Mobile phones, internet, biometric passports. Tax inspections, police databases, polyclinic cards. And today, smart communication apps with permanent maps, vaccination records and ‘green passports’ to be introduced across Europe are tools to collect information about anyone and find out, even where they are at any given time.



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