Cybercrime Atlas Impact Report 2025

Page 21 of 26 · WEF_Cybercrime_Atlas_Impact_Report_2025.pdf

The Cybercrime Atlas is a platform for collaboration between private-sector, academic and non-profit experts. Its success depends on strong partnerships with organizations that act as hubs for collaboration and coordination between law enforcement and civil society. INTERPOL INTERPOL’s innovative approach to partnerships has created space for the Cybercrime Atlas community to experiment and improve the relevance of its research over time. The Cybercrime Atlas community provided operationally actionable insights to Operations Serengeti in November 2024 and Serengeti 2.0 in August 2025. The Serengeti operations involved coordinated action by law enforcement across more than 19 countries in Africa, leading to significant numbers of arrests and the seizure of $140 million in criminal assets linked to crimes of a value totalling $678 million, and impacting more than 120,000 victims. Operations Serengeti led to the seizure, destruction or re-use of technical infrastructure ranging from hard drives to mobile electricity generators. Europol Cybercrime Atlas engagement with Europol deepened in 2024-2025 and now includes insight sharing through participation in advisory groups at Europol’s European Cybercrime Centre (EC3) and interactions with the EC3-hosted Joint-Cybercrime Action Task Force (J-CAT).10 The value of Europol’s openness to collaboration is magnified by EC3’s growing role as a hub for public-private insight sharing and collaboration to disrupt cybercrime networks. The Cybercrime Atlas is also thankful for EC3’s engagement in capacity-building training in the wider EU neighbourhood, where EC3 experts supported Cybercrime Atlas-led training for law enforcement, CERTs and policy-makers at the Western Balkans Cyber Capacity Centre in May 2025.Cybercrime Atlas law enforcement partnerships STOP THE TRAFFIK In mid-2025, the Cybercrime Atlas began a targeted collaboration with STOP THE TRAFFIK , which includes data sharing to support Cybercrime Atlas research into cyber scam farms. Cyber scam farms regularly depend on human trafficking and exploitation to secure the workforce needed to carry out large-scale online fraud. STOP THE TRAFFIK  is a UK-based non-profit working to prevent human trafficking worldwide. Through intelligence-led approaches, including hosting of the Traffik Analysis Hub (a global technology platform sharing and analysing human trafficking data), STOP THE TRAFFIK works with businesses, financial institutions, governments, vulnerable communities and community partners to identify, disrupt and reduce the risk of human trafficking and exploitation. This marks the Cybercrime Atlas’s first formalized collaboration with an organization outside its core community.Cybercrime Atlas civil society partnerships Cybercrime Atlas Impact Report 2025 21
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