Skip to content
AttackFeed by Joe Wagner | Cybersecurity News from Across the Internet

AttackFeed by Joe Wagner

Cybersecurity News from Across the Internet

  • Attack/News Feeds
  • Gov Alerts/ISAC Feeds
  • Vulnerability Alerts
  • Privacy/Governance Feeds
  • Fraud Feeds
  • iOS App
  • Android App
  • Home
  • Attack Feeds
  • Project Compass is Europol’s new playbook for taking on The Com  – CyberScoop
AttackFeed by Joe Wagner | Project Compass is Europol’s new playbook for taking on The Com  - CyberScoop

Project Compass is Europol’s new playbook for taking on The Com  – CyberScoop

Posted on February 26, 2026 By Matt Kapko
Attack Feeds

A global law enforcement effort has taken root to combat The Com, a sprawling nihilistic network of thousands of minors and young adults engaged in various forms of cybercrime, including physical violence and extortion.

Project Compass, an operation coordinated by Europol with support from 28 countries, including all members of the Five Eyes, has resulted in the arrest of 30 perpetrators since the initiative got underway in January 2025, authorities said in a news release Thursday. 

Officials said sustained countermeasures have contributed to the full and partial identification of 179 perpetrators, while the operation has also safeguarded four victims and identified up to 62 victims. 

The Com is splintered into three primary subsets with different objectives the FBI describes as Hacker Com, In Real Life Com and Extortion Com. Crimes attributed to group members have grown increasingly complex, with perpetrators going to great lengths to mask identities, hide financial transactions and launder money. 

“These networks deliberately target children in the digital spaces where they feel most at ease,” Anna Sjöberg, head of Europol’s European Counter Terrorism Centre, said in a statement.

Various branches of The Com have been linked to high-profile crimes over the past few years, and law enforcement has responded with heightened activity and interest in the group’s activities. 

The Com is vast — many perpetrators remain at large and even more victims are still suffering and awaiting aid. 

This growing global effort to thwart shifting crime trends with appropriate resources has built a foundation that will foster results beyond those achieved to date, said Allison Nixon, chief research officer at Unit 221B.

“How do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time,” she told CyberScoop. “The Com represents a major social problem impacting youth, and peoples’ expectations need to be realistic. These early numbers and ramping up effort over time is what success looks like and we need to encourage that.”

An effective police response to The Com requires a different way of thinking and retooling, “but it is more solvable than crime originating from hostile nations,” Nixon said.

Project Compass is built around an information-sharing network, which enables each of the partner nations to assist with investigations across various specialized units. Countries are also sharing advice for preventative measures and mobilizing data sprints to bring intelligence together for ongoing cases.

“Project Compass allows us to intervene earlier, safeguard victims and disrupt those who exploit vulnerability for extremist purposes,” Sjöberg said. “No country can address this threat alone — and through this cooperation, we are closing the gaps they try to hide in.”

Europol did not identify the 30 people arrested under Project Compass thus far. Yet, at least some of those cases are public. 

Authorities during the past year have arrested multiple members of a Com offshoot known as 764, which is a growing online threat to coerce vulnerable children to produce child sexual abuse material of themselves, gor material, self mutilation, sibling abuse, animal abuses and other acts of violence. 

Two alleged leaders of 764, Leonidas Varagiannis and Prasan Nepal, were arrested and charged for directing and distributing CSAM in April.

Tony Christoper Long and Alexis Aldair Chavez both pleaded guilty late last year to multiple crimes linked to their involvement with the extremist group. Other alleged 764 members have been arrested in the United States more recently, including Erik Lee Madison and Aaron Corey.

The post Project Compass is Europol’s new playbook for taking on The Com appeared first on CyberScoop.

  –

Read More  – CyberScoop 

Post navigation

❮ Previous Post: Your staff are your biggest security risk: AI is making it worse  – GRAHAM CLULEY
Next Post: New Aeternum C2 Botnet Evades Takedowns via Polygon Blockchain  – Hackread – Cybersecurity News, Data Breaches, AI and More ❯

You may also like

AttackFeed by Joe Wagner | Pwn2Own Berlin 2026: The Full Schedule  - Zero Day Initiative - Blog
Attack Feeds
Pwn2Own Berlin 2026: The Full Schedule  – Zero Day Initiative – Blog
May 13, 2026
AttackFeed by Joe Wagner | Ubuntu CVE-2026-3888 Bug Lets Attackers Gain Root via systemd Cleanup Timing Exploit  - The Hacker News
Attack Feeds
Ubuntu CVE-2026-3888 Bug Lets Attackers Gain Root via systemd Cleanup Timing Exploit  – The Hacker News
March 18, 2026
AttackFeed by Joe Wagner | How Exposed Endpoints Increase Risk Across LLM Infrastructure  - The Hacker News
Attack Feeds
How Exposed Endpoints Increase Risk Across LLM Infrastructure  – The Hacker News
February 23, 2026
AttackFeed by Joe Wagner | Europol-Led Operation Takes Down Tycoon 2FA Phishing-as-a-Service Linked to 64,000 Attacks  - The Hacker News
Attack Feeds
Europol-Led Operation Takes Down Tycoon 2FA Phishing-as-a-Service Linked to 64,000 Attacks  – The Hacker News
March 5, 2026
  • Attack Feeds
  • Privacy/Governance Feed
  • Gov/ISAC Feeds
  • Alert Feeds
  • Privacy Policy
  • Wagner Cybersecurity

Copyright © 2026 AttackFeed by Joe Wagner.

Theme: Oceanly News Dark by ScriptsTown

We are using cookies for analytics purposes only.  We do not store, track or sell user information.

You can find out more about which cookies we are using or switch them off in .

AttackFeed by Joe Wagner
Powered by  GDPR Cookie Compliance
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.

Strictly Necessary Cookies

Strictly Necessary Cookie should be enabled at all times so that we can save your preferences for cookie settings.