As February 2026 progresses, this week’s The Cyber Express Weekly Roundup examines a series of cybersecurity incidents and enforcement actions spanning Europe, Africa, Australia, and the United States.
The developments include a breach affecting the European Commission’s mobile management infrastructure, a ransomware attack disrupting Senegal’s national identity systems, a landmark financial penalty imposed on an Australian investment firm, and the sentencing of a fugitive linked to a multimillion-dollar cryptocurrency scam.
From suspected exploitation of zero-day vulnerabilities to prolonged breach detection failures and cross-border financial crime, these cases highlights the operational, legal, and systemic dimensions of modern cyber risk.
The Cyber Express Weekly Roundup
European Commission Mobile Infrastructure Breach Raises Supply Chain Questions
The European Commission reported a cyberattack on its mobile device management (MDM) system on January 30, potentially exposing staff names and mobile numbers, though no devices were compromised, and the breach was contained within nine hours. Read more…
Ransomware Disrupts Senegal’s National Identity Systems
In West Africa, a major cyberattack hit Senegal’s Directorate of File Automation (DAF), halting identity card production and disrupting national ID, passport, and electoral services. While authorities insist no personal data was compromised, the ransomware group. The full extent of the breach is still under investigation. Read more…
Australian Court Imposes Landmark Cybersecurity Penalty
In Australia, FIIG Securities was fined AU$2.5 million for failing to maintain adequate cybersecurity protections, leading to a 2023 ransomware breach that exposed 385GB of client data, including IDs, bank details, and tax numbers. The firm must also pay AU$500,000 in legal costs and implement an independent compliance program. Read more…


Crypto Investment Scam Leader Sentenced in Absentia
U.S. authorities sentenced Daren Li in absentia to 20 years for a $73 million cryptocurrency scam targeting American victims. Li remains a fugitive after fleeing in December 2025. The Cambodia-based scheme used “pig butchering” tactics to lure victims to fake crypto platforms, laundering nearly $60 million through U.S. shell companies. Eight co-conspirators have pleaded guilty. The case was led by the U.S. Secret Service. Read more…
India Brings AI-Generated Content Under Formal Regulation
India has regulated AI-generated content under notification G.S.R. 120(E), effective February 20, 2026, defining “synthetically generated information” (SGI) as AI-created content that appears real, including deepfakes and voiceovers. Platforms must label AI content, embed metadata, remove unlawful content quickly, and verify user declarations. Read More…
Weekly Takeaway
Taken together, this weekly roundup highlights the expanding attack surface created by digital transformation, the persistence of ransomware threats to national infrastructure, and the intensifying regulatory scrutiny facing financial institutions.
From zero-day exploitation and supply chain risks to enforcement actions and transnational crypto fraud, organizations are confronting an environment where operational resilience, compliance, and proactive monitoring are no longer optional; they are foundational to trust and continuity in the digital economy.
