Industry News

Cybercrime Shifts To Vulnerable Nations Amid AI

Ha Bui
Reading time: 2 min
Cybercrime Shifts To Vulnerable Nations Amid AI

Summarize this post by:

Global technology and security developments last week highlighted the intersection of cybercrime, AI, and semiconductor supply chains, with fresh warnings from the United Nations and new geopolitical moves across Asia. 

The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNDOC) reported signs of cyber-scam operations in Timor-Leste, including seized SIM cards and satellite devices linked to triad-affiliated groups. Officials warned that as law enforcement pressure mounts in Southeast Asia, criminal syndicates are relocating scam centers to jurisdictions with limited experience in countering such activity. The finding follows new U.S. Treasury sanctions on scam hubs in Myanmar and Cambodia, where groups tied to armed factions and Chinese criminal networks have built compounds for gambling, trafficking, and large-scale digital fraud. 

Meanwhile, the region saw several key technology and policy developments: 

  • APNIC fee adjustments – The Asia Pacific Network Information Center revised its fee structure for members exiting “least developed country” status, offering a 25% discount in the first year for very small organizations in Bangladesh, Nepal, and Laos. 
  • Japan backs Micron – Tokyo pledged ¥536 billion ($3.63B) to support Micron’s high-speed DRAM production for AI applications. In exchange, Micron must prioritize Japanese buyers during supply disruptions. 
  • Mitsubishi Electric acquires Nozomi Networks – The $883M deal strengthens cybersecurity for industrial sectors including energy, rail, and manufacturing, aligning with Mitsubishi’s broader digital infrastructure strategy. 
  • China probes U.S. chip dumping – Beijing launched an inquiry into whether U.S. firms are flooding the Chinese market with low-cost interface and gate driver IC chips, coinciding with a 52% price drop. Officials accused Washington of using export controls to undermine China’s semiconductor industry. 

Together, these developments underscore the dual challenge of securing digital ecosystems while navigating AI-driven supply chains and rising geopolitical tensions in chips and cybersecurity. 

 

Source: 

https://www.theregister.com/2025/09/15/asia_tech_news_roundup/ 

Ready to Build Your Next Product?

Start with a 30-min discovery call. We'll map your technical landscape and recommend an engineering approach.

Contact us

Get Industrial Insights Delivered to Your Inbox

By clicking "Subscribe" you agree to allow Eastgate Software to send newsletter emails to your address. For more information, please read our Privacy Policy.

About The Author

Ha Bui

Ha Bui

CEO & Founder, Eastgate Software

Ha Bui is the CEO and Founder of Eastgate Software. Since 2014, he has led the company's 12+ year engineering partnerships with Siemens Mobility and Yunex Traffic, building a 200+ engineer organization that delivers mission-critical ITS, FinTech, and enterprise software to German engineering standards.

Related Articles