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1000 results for “EVerest”
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@tehstu It's even worse at higher levels.... gotta haul out all the bodies.
AP: Mount Everest’s highest camp is littered with frozen garbage, and cleanup is likely to take years
(July 6, 2024)"...The Nepal government-funded team of soldiers and Sherpas removed 11 tons (24,000 pounds) of garbage, four dead bodies and a skeleton from Everest during this year’s climbing season. ..."
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Viral Footage of Everest Base Camp Looks Like a Genuine Garbage Dump
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« Antoine Jeanney a réalisé un #Everesting sur une côte de Planoise, à #Besançon »
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Everestistä saa aina hyvät klikkiotsikot, vaikka asialla olisi Everestin kanssa vähän tai ei ollenkaan tekemistä. Tämän jupakan laaja rikostutkinta Nepalissa tuotti kansainväliseen lehdistöön otsikot skandaalista ja myrkytyksistä, jotka Ylekin kopioi – päiväkausia sen jälkeen, kun asialliset lähteet olivat oikoneet väitteet. Jos asia oikeasti kiinnostaa, tuossa on hyvä yhteenveto:
https://explorersweb.com/the-facts-behind-the-everest-scandal-of-poisoned-clients-and-fake-rescues/
#Nepal #Everest #vuoret #klikkiotsikot -
Everest’s “rescue” scam allegedly turned sick trekkers into a million-dollar insurance machine
Click to visit our Youtube channel and watch the video. A helicopter conducts a high-altitude rescue on Mount Everest, where evacuations can mean the difference between life and death.Dear Cherubs, Mount Everest is already dangerous without anyone allegedly helping the mountain along. Nepalese police say a rescue-and-insurance network may have turned routine illness into a very profitable business, with fake helicopter evacuations and forged paperwork padding claims to international insurers.
According to OCCRP and AP, investigators filed organized-crime and fraud charges against 32 people in Kathmandu, including trekking-agency owners, helicopter operators, and hospital executives. Police say the scheme ran between 2022 and 2025 and relied on fake medical records, manipulated rescue logs, and helicopter flights that were billed as emergencies even when they may not have been.
HOW THE SCHEME IS SAID TO HAVE WORKED
A helicopter departs Everest Base Camp. Photo by Dmoberhaus, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0.The alleged playbook was as grimly simple as it was expensive: make climbers feel desperately ill, tell them they need an urgent descent, then send in a helicopter and invoice the insurer. The Independent reported that guides were accused of using baking powder or similar food tampering to trigger gastrointestinal distress that could look like altitude sickness or food poisoning. OCCRP said investigators described the same tactic in court filings, including allegations that trekkers were fed baking soda before being “rescued.”
That matters because on Everest and its surrounding routes, a real evacuation can be life-saving and very costly. AP noted that climbers are required to show proof of insurance covering helicopter rescue before permits are issued, which is sensible in a place where the nearest decent solution is often a very expensive aircraft. Sensible systems, unfortunately, are also very attractive to people with bad intentions and a calculator.
OCCRP reported that police records put the alleged take at at least $19.69 million in insurance money, with three rescue firms linked to the bulk of the losses. One company was accused of 171 suspicious rescues out of 1,248, while others allegedly filed scores of fake claims worth millions more.
WHY IT MATTERS
This is bigger than a single scandal on the “roof of the world.” It is a reminder that high-altitude tourism runs on trust: trust in guides, trust in hospitals, trust in rescue operators, and trust that when someone says “medical emergency,” the paperwork is not doing stand-up comedy behind the scenes. AP said authorities have kept investigating after the first arrests in January, while The Independent reported that the case is already drawing sharper scrutiny over Nepal’s rescue industry.
As noted by thisclaimer.com, Everest stories tend to travel fast, but this one travels with a particularly awkward aftertaste. If the allegations hold up in court, Nepal will have to prove it can protect both climbers and the rescue system itself, because the mountain is hard enough without anyone gamifying the emergency button.
Sources:
The Thisclaimer logo blends a classic warning symbol with a brain icon to represent critical thinking, curiosity, and thoughtful disclaimers. #altitudeSickness #asia #education #everest #health #helicopterRescue #inspiration #insuranceFraud #mountaineering #Music #nepal #news #organizedCrime #poetry #travelScams #trekking #viral
AP News — https://apnews.com/article/nepal-mountaineering-fake-rescue-scam-ca64426bfe3373d7840fdb1d95f93a0a
OCCRP — https://www.occrp.org/en/news/poisoned-trekkers-and-phantom-flights-nepal-charges-32-in-massive-himalayan-rescue-scam
Kathmandu Post — https://kathmandupost.com/national/2026/03/23/nepal-charges-32-in-fake-rescue-scam
The Independent — https://www.independent.co.uk/travel/news-and-advice/mount-everest-climb-nepal-insurance-scam-sherpa-poisoning-b2952027.html
thisclaimer.com — https://thisclaimer.com -
Everest’s “rescue” scam allegedly turned sick trekkers into a million-dollar insurance machine
Click to visit our Youtube channel and watch the video. A helicopter conducts a high-altitude rescue on Mount Everest, where evacuations can mean the difference between life and death.Dear Cherubs, Mount Everest is already dangerous without anyone allegedly helping the mountain along. Nepalese police say a rescue-and-insurance network may have turned routine illness into a very profitable business, with fake helicopter evacuations and forged paperwork padding claims to international insurers.
According to OCCRP and AP, investigators filed organized-crime and fraud charges against 32 people in Kathmandu, including trekking-agency owners, helicopter operators, and hospital executives. Police say the scheme ran between 2022 and 2025 and relied on fake medical records, manipulated rescue logs, and helicopter flights that were billed as emergencies even when they may not have been.
HOW THE SCHEME IS SAID TO HAVE WORKED
A helicopter departs Everest Base Camp. Photo by Dmoberhaus, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0.The alleged playbook was as grimly simple as it was expensive: make climbers feel desperately ill, tell them they need an urgent descent, then send in a helicopter and invoice the insurer. The Independent reported that guides were accused of using baking powder or similar food tampering to trigger gastrointestinal distress that could look like altitude sickness or food poisoning. OCCRP said investigators described the same tactic in court filings, including allegations that trekkers were fed baking soda before being “rescued.”
That matters because on Everest and its surrounding routes, a real evacuation can be life-saving and very costly. AP noted that climbers are required to show proof of insurance covering helicopter rescue before permits are issued, which is sensible in a place where the nearest decent solution is often a very expensive aircraft. Sensible systems, unfortunately, are also very attractive to people with bad intentions and a calculator.
OCCRP reported that police records put the alleged take at at least $19.69 million in insurance money, with three rescue firms linked to the bulk of the losses. One company was accused of 171 suspicious rescues out of 1,248, while others allegedly filed scores of fake claims worth millions more.
WHY IT MATTERS
This is bigger than a single scandal on the “roof of the world.” It is a reminder that high-altitude tourism runs on trust: trust in guides, trust in hospitals, trust in rescue operators, and trust that when someone says “medical emergency,” the paperwork is not doing stand-up comedy behind the scenes. AP said authorities have kept investigating after the first arrests in January, while The Independent reported that the case is already drawing sharper scrutiny over Nepal’s rescue industry.
As noted by thisclaimer.com, Everest stories tend to travel fast, but this one travels with a particularly awkward aftertaste. If the allegations hold up in court, Nepal will have to prove it can protect both climbers and the rescue system itself, because the mountain is hard enough without anyone gamifying the emergency button.
Sources:
The Thisclaimer logo blends a classic warning symbol with a brain icon to represent critical thinking, curiosity, and thoughtful disclaimers. #altitudeSickness #asia #education #everest #health #helicopterRescue #inspiration #insuranceFraud #mountaineering #Music #nepal #news #organizedCrime #poetry #travelScams #trekking #viral
AP News — https://apnews.com/article/nepal-mountaineering-fake-rescue-scam-ca64426bfe3373d7840fdb1d95f93a0a
OCCRP — https://www.occrp.org/en/news/poisoned-trekkers-and-phantom-flights-nepal-charges-32-in-massive-himalayan-rescue-scam
Kathmandu Post — https://kathmandupost.com/national/2026/03/23/nepal-charges-32-in-fake-rescue-scam
The Independent — https://www.independent.co.uk/travel/news-and-advice/mount-everest-climb-nepal-insurance-scam-sherpa-poisoning-b2952027.html
thisclaimer.com — https://thisclaimer.com -
Everest’s “rescue” scam allegedly turned sick trekkers into a million-dollar insurance machine
Click to visit our Youtube channel and watch the video. A helicopter conducts a high-altitude rescue on Mount Everest, where evacuations can mean the difference between life and death.Dear Cherubs, Mount Everest is already dangerous without anyone allegedly helping the mountain along. Nepalese police say a rescue-and-insurance network may have turned routine illness into a very profitable business, with fake helicopter evacuations and forged paperwork padding claims to international insurers.
According to OCCRP and AP, investigators filed organized-crime and fraud charges against 32 people in Kathmandu, including trekking-agency owners, helicopter operators, and hospital executives. Police say the scheme ran between 2022 and 2025 and relied on fake medical records, manipulated rescue logs, and helicopter flights that were billed as emergencies even when they may not have been.
HOW THE SCHEME IS SAID TO HAVE WORKED
A helicopter departs Everest Base Camp. Photo by Dmoberhaus, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0.The alleged playbook was as grimly simple as it was expensive: make climbers feel desperately ill, tell them they need an urgent descent, then send in a helicopter and invoice the insurer. The Independent reported that guides were accused of using baking powder or similar food tampering to trigger gastrointestinal distress that could look like altitude sickness or food poisoning. OCCRP said investigators described the same tactic in court filings, including allegations that trekkers were fed baking soda before being “rescued.”
That matters because on Everest and its surrounding routes, a real evacuation can be life-saving and very costly. AP noted that climbers are required to show proof of insurance covering helicopter rescue before permits are issued, which is sensible in a place where the nearest decent solution is often a very expensive aircraft. Sensible systems, unfortunately, are also very attractive to people with bad intentions and a calculator.
OCCRP reported that police records put the alleged take at at least $19.69 million in insurance money, with three rescue firms linked to the bulk of the losses. One company was accused of 171 suspicious rescues out of 1,248, while others allegedly filed scores of fake claims worth millions more.
WHY IT MATTERS
This is bigger than a single scandal on the “roof of the world.” It is a reminder that high-altitude tourism runs on trust: trust in guides, trust in hospitals, trust in rescue operators, and trust that when someone says “medical emergency,” the paperwork is not doing stand-up comedy behind the scenes. AP said authorities have kept investigating after the first arrests in January, while The Independent reported that the case is already drawing sharper scrutiny over Nepal’s rescue industry.
As noted by thisclaimer.com, Everest stories tend to travel fast, but this one travels with a particularly awkward aftertaste. If the allegations hold up in court, Nepal will have to prove it can protect both climbers and the rescue system itself, because the mountain is hard enough without anyone gamifying the emergency button.
Sources:
The Thisclaimer logo blends a classic warning symbol with a brain icon to represent critical thinking, curiosity, and thoughtful disclaimers. #altitudeSickness #asia #education #everest #health #helicopterRescue #inspiration #insuranceFraud #mountaineering #Music #nepal #news #organizedCrime #poetry #travelScams #trekking #viral
AP News — https://apnews.com/article/nepal-mountaineering-fake-rescue-scam-ca64426bfe3373d7840fdb1d95f93a0a
OCCRP — https://www.occrp.org/en/news/poisoned-trekkers-and-phantom-flights-nepal-charges-32-in-massive-himalayan-rescue-scam
Kathmandu Post — https://kathmandupost.com/national/2026/03/23/nepal-charges-32-in-fake-rescue-scam
The Independent — https://www.independent.co.uk/travel/news-and-advice/mount-everest-climb-nepal-insurance-scam-sherpa-poisoning-b2952027.html
thisclaimer.com — https://thisclaimer.com -
Everest’s “rescue” scam allegedly turned sick trekkers into a million-dollar insurance machine
Click to visit our Youtube channel and watch the video. A helicopter conducts a high-altitude rescue on Mount Everest, where evacuations can mean the difference between life and death.Dear Cherubs, Mount Everest is already dangerous without anyone allegedly helping the mountain along. Nepalese police say a rescue-and-insurance network may have turned routine illness into a very profitable business, with fake helicopter evacuations and forged paperwork padding claims to international insurers.
According to OCCRP and AP, investigators filed organized-crime and fraud charges against 32 people in Kathmandu, including trekking-agency owners, helicopter operators, and hospital executives. Police say the scheme ran between 2022 and 2025 and relied on fake medical records, manipulated rescue logs, and helicopter flights that were billed as emergencies even when they may not have been.
HOW THE SCHEME IS SAID TO HAVE WORKED
A helicopter departs Everest Base Camp. Photo by Dmoberhaus, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0.The alleged playbook was as grimly simple as it was expensive: make climbers feel desperately ill, tell them they need an urgent descent, then send in a helicopter and invoice the insurer. The Independent reported that guides were accused of using baking powder or similar food tampering to trigger gastrointestinal distress that could look like altitude sickness or food poisoning. OCCRP said investigators described the same tactic in court filings, including allegations that trekkers were fed baking soda before being “rescued.”
That matters because on Everest and its surrounding routes, a real evacuation can be life-saving and very costly. AP noted that climbers are required to show proof of insurance covering helicopter rescue before permits are issued, which is sensible in a place where the nearest decent solution is often a very expensive aircraft. Sensible systems, unfortunately, are also very attractive to people with bad intentions and a calculator.
OCCRP reported that police records put the alleged take at at least $19.69 million in insurance money, with three rescue firms linked to the bulk of the losses. One company was accused of 171 suspicious rescues out of 1,248, while others allegedly filed scores of fake claims worth millions more.
WHY IT MATTERS
This is bigger than a single scandal on the “roof of the world.” It is a reminder that high-altitude tourism runs on trust: trust in guides, trust in hospitals, trust in rescue operators, and trust that when someone says “medical emergency,” the paperwork is not doing stand-up comedy behind the scenes. AP said authorities have kept investigating after the first arrests in January, while The Independent reported that the case is already drawing sharper scrutiny over Nepal’s rescue industry.
As noted by thisclaimer.com, Everest stories tend to travel fast, but this one travels with a particularly awkward aftertaste. If the allegations hold up in court, Nepal will have to prove it can protect both climbers and the rescue system itself, because the mountain is hard enough without anyone gamifying the emergency button.
Sources:
The Thisclaimer logo blends a classic warning symbol with a brain icon to represent critical thinking, curiosity, and thoughtful disclaimers. #altitudeSickness #asia #education #everest #health #helicopterRescue #inspiration #insuranceFraud #mountaineering #Music #nepal #news #organizedCrime #poetry #travelScams #trekking #viral
AP News — https://apnews.com/article/nepal-mountaineering-fake-rescue-scam-ca64426bfe3373d7840fdb1d95f93a0a
OCCRP — https://www.occrp.org/en/news/poisoned-trekkers-and-phantom-flights-nepal-charges-32-in-massive-himalayan-rescue-scam
Kathmandu Post — https://kathmandupost.com/national/2026/03/23/nepal-charges-32-in-fake-rescue-scam
The Independent — https://www.independent.co.uk/travel/news-and-advice/mount-everest-climb-nepal-insurance-scam-sherpa-poisoning-b2952027.html
thisclaimer.com — https://thisclaimer.com -
Everest’s “rescue” scam allegedly turned sick trekkers into a million-dollar insurance machine
Click to visit our Youtube channel and watch the video. A helicopter conducts a high-altitude rescue on Mount Everest, where evacuations can mean the difference between life and death.Dear Cherubs, Mount Everest is already dangerous without anyone allegedly helping the mountain along. Nepalese police say a rescue-and-insurance network may have turned routine illness into a very profitable business, with fake helicopter evacuations and forged paperwork padding claims to international insurers.
According to OCCRP and AP, investigators filed organized-crime and fraud charges against 32 people in Kathmandu, including trekking-agency owners, helicopter operators, and hospital executives. Police say the scheme ran between 2022 and 2025 and relied on fake medical records, manipulated rescue logs, and helicopter flights that were billed as emergencies even when they may not have been.
HOW THE SCHEME IS SAID TO HAVE WORKED
A helicopter departs Everest Base Camp. Photo by Dmoberhaus, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0.The alleged playbook was as grimly simple as it was expensive: make climbers feel desperately ill, tell them they need an urgent descent, then send in a helicopter and invoice the insurer. The Independent reported that guides were accused of using baking powder or similar food tampering to trigger gastrointestinal distress that could look like altitude sickness or food poisoning. OCCRP said investigators described the same tactic in court filings, including allegations that trekkers were fed baking soda before being “rescued.”
That matters because on Everest and its surrounding routes, a real evacuation can be life-saving and very costly. AP noted that climbers are required to show proof of insurance covering helicopter rescue before permits are issued, which is sensible in a place where the nearest decent solution is often a very expensive aircraft. Sensible systems, unfortunately, are also very attractive to people with bad intentions and a calculator.
OCCRP reported that police records put the alleged take at at least $19.69 million in insurance money, with three rescue firms linked to the bulk of the losses. One company was accused of 171 suspicious rescues out of 1,248, while others allegedly filed scores of fake claims worth millions more.
WHY IT MATTERS
This is bigger than a single scandal on the “roof of the world.” It is a reminder that high-altitude tourism runs on trust: trust in guides, trust in hospitals, trust in rescue operators, and trust that when someone says “medical emergency,” the paperwork is not doing stand-up comedy behind the scenes. AP said authorities have kept investigating after the first arrests in January, while The Independent reported that the case is already drawing sharper scrutiny over Nepal’s rescue industry.
As noted by thisclaimer.com, Everest stories tend to travel fast, but this one travels with a particularly awkward aftertaste. If the allegations hold up in court, Nepal will have to prove it can protect both climbers and the rescue system itself, because the mountain is hard enough without anyone gamifying the emergency button.
Sources:
The Thisclaimer logo blends a classic warning symbol with a brain icon to represent critical thinking, curiosity, and thoughtful disclaimers. #altitudeSickness #asia #education #everest #health #helicopterRescue #inspiration #insuranceFraud #mountaineering #Music #nepal #news #organizedCrime #poetry #travelScams #trekking #viral
AP News — https://apnews.com/article/nepal-mountaineering-fake-rescue-scam-ca64426bfe3373d7840fdb1d95f93a0a
OCCRP — https://www.occrp.org/en/news/poisoned-trekkers-and-phantom-flights-nepal-charges-32-in-massive-himalayan-rescue-scam
Kathmandu Post — https://kathmandupost.com/national/2026/03/23/nepal-charges-32-in-fake-rescue-scam
The Independent — https://www.independent.co.uk/travel/news-and-advice/mount-everest-climb-nepal-insurance-scam-sherpa-poisoning-b2952027.html
thisclaimer.com — https://thisclaimer.com -
EVEREST GUIDES CHARGED IN WIDESPREAD INSURANCE SCAM
32 Nepal guides charged for scamming insurers by making 4,782 climbers sick with baking soda for helicopter rescues worth $20 million.
#EverestScam, #NepalTourism, #InsuranceFraud, #HelicopterRescue, #ClimbingSafety
https://newsletter.tf/nepal-guides-charged-insurance-scam-climbers/
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EVEREST GUIDES CHARGED IN WIDESPREAD INSURANCE SCAM
32 Nepal guides charged for scamming insurers by making 4,782 climbers sick with baking soda for helicopter rescues worth $20 million.
#EverestScam, #NepalTourism, #InsuranceFraud, #HelicopterRescue, #ClimbingSafety
https://newsletter.tf/nepal-guides-charged-insurance-scam-climbers/
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32 guides in Nepal are accused of a $20 million scam, making climbers sick to get money from insurance. This is a big increase in fraud cases.
#EverestScam, #NepalTourism, #InsuranceFraud, #HelicopterRescue, #ClimbingSafety
https://newsletter.tf/nepal-guides-charged-insurance-scam-climbers/ -
32 guides in Nepal are accused of a $20 million scam, making climbers sick to get money from insurance. This is a big increase in fraud cases.
#EverestScam, #NepalTourism, #InsuranceFraud, #HelicopterRescue, #ClimbingSafety
https://newsletter.tf/nepal-guides-charged-insurance-scam-climbers/ -
Six-thousander Thamserku with its impressive face, seen on an autumn morning from the SW, from the Everest Base Camp trekking trail. #Everest Region, #Nepal
For full frame, downloads & prints see: https://a.born2trek.com.
#landscapephotography #mountainphotography #himalayas #trekking #trekkininnepal
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#Datenleck: 72 Millionen Datensätze von #UnderArmour geleakt | Security https://www.heise.de/news/Datenleck-72-Millionen-Datensaetze-von-Under-Armour-geleakt-11148785.html #DataLeak #HIBP #HaveIBeenPwned #Datenschutz #privacy #phishing #Ransomware #Malware #Everest
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Everest Ransomware: Under Armour prüft Datenleck - 72 Millionen Nutzer betroffen?
#technews #cybersecurity #datenschutz #datenleck #underarmour #everestransomware
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Makalu, Earth's fifth highest mountain with its impressive West Face, seen from Renjo La, the beautiful spot en-route the Three Passes Trek in the #Everest Region of #Nepal.
For downloads & prints, check my gallery: buff.ly/qvapO2e. For the route description, see Cicerone Press #trekking guidebook: https://www.cicerone.co.uk/everest-a-trekkers-guide.
#trekkinginnepal #hiking #mountainphotography #trekkingphotography #landscapephotography
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Makalu, Earth's fifth highest mountain with its impressive West Face, seen from Renjo La, the beautiful spot en-route the Three Passes Trek in the #Everest Region of #Nepal.
For downloads & prints, check my gallery: buff.ly/qvapO2e. For the route description, see Cicerone Press #trekking guidebook: https://www.cicerone.co.uk/everest-a-trekkers-guide.
#trekkinginnepal #hiking #mountainphotography #trekkingphotography #landscapephotography
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Makalu, Earth's fifth highest mountain with its impressive West Face, seen from Renjo La, the beautiful spot en-route the Three Passes Trek in the #Everest Region of #Nepal.
For downloads & prints, check my gallery: buff.ly/qvapO2e. For the route description, see Cicerone Press #trekking guidebook: https://www.cicerone.co.uk/everest-a-trekkers-guide.
#trekkinginnepal #hiking #mountainphotography #trekkingphotography #landscapephotography
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Makalu, Earth's fifth highest mountain with its impressive West Face, seen from Renjo La, the beautiful spot en-route the Three Passes Trek in the #Everest Region of #Nepal.
For downloads & prints, check my gallery: buff.ly/qvapO2e. For the route description, see Cicerone Press #trekking guidebook: https://www.cicerone.co.uk/everest-a-trekkers-guide.
#trekkinginnepal #hiking #mountainphotography #trekkingphotography #landscapephotography
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Experience Everest like never before
The Everest Base Camp Helicopter Tour offers breathtaking aerial views, smooth comfort, and unforgettable Himalayan panoramas, perfect if you want an epic Everest experience in less time.Learn more:
https://mountelegancetreks.com/trips/everest-base-camp-helicopter-tour/ -
Planning an unforgettable Himalayan adventure?
Our 12-day Everest Base Camp Trek offers a well-paced journey through classic trails, mountain villages, and incredible high-altitude scenery.
View the full trip details here:
https://mountelegancetreks.com/trips/12-days-everest-base-camp-trek/ -
Everest Ransomware Attack Hits Iberia Airlines and National Money Mart https://dailydarkweb.net/everest-ransomware-attack-hits-iberia-airlines-and-national-money-mart/ #NationalMoneyMartCompany #EverestRansomwareGroup #FinancialServices #AviationSecurity #RansomwareNews #IberiaAirlines #cyberattack #databreach #ransomware #darkweb #PIILeak
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Everest Ransomware Attack Hits Iberia Airlines and National Money Mart https://dailydarkweb.net/everest-ransomware-attack-hits-iberia-airlines-and-national-money-mart/ #NationalMoneyMartCompany #EverestRansomwareGroup #FinancialServices #AviationSecurity #RansomwareNews #IberiaAirlines #cyberattack #databreach #ransomware #darkweb #PIILeak
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9 tuổi nhưng Rio James đã vượt qua thời tiết khắc nghiệt và chứng say độ cao, leo đến độ cao 5.364m tại Trại căn cứ Everest trong hành trình 12 ngày đầy gian nan nhằm gây quỹ giúp đỡ người nghèo. #Everest #Exploration #Charity #Vietnam #NúiEverest #ThámHiểm #TừThiện
#MastodonVietnam #Inspiration #YoungExplorer #ClimbingForACause #VietnameseHero #ĐồngHànhCùngNgườiNghèo #VượtKhó #TươngLaiSáng
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Everest Ransomware Group Breaches Air Miles España Data https://dailydarkweb.net/everest-ransomware-group-breaches-air-miles-espana-data/ #Everestransomware #RansomwareNews #AirMilesEspaña #LoyaltyProgram #CyberSecurity #cyber-attack #PersonalData #databreach #TravelClub #Spain #GDPR
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Everest Ransomware Group Breaches Air Miles España Data https://dailydarkweb.net/everest-ransomware-group-breaches-air-miles-espana-data/ #Everestransomware #RansomwareNews #AirMilesEspaña #LoyaltyProgram #CyberSecurity #cyber-attack #PersonalData #databreach #TravelClub #Spain #GDPR
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Everest Ransomware Group Breaches Air Miles España Data https://dailydarkweb.net/everest-ransomware-group-breaches-air-miles-espana-data/ #Everestransomware #RansomwareNews #AirMilesEspaña #LoyaltyProgram #CyberSecurity #cyber-attack #PersonalData #databreach #TravelClub #Spain #GDPR
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Everest Ransomware Group Breaches Air Miles España Data https://dailydarkweb.net/everest-ransomware-group-breaches-air-miles-espana-data/ #Everestransomware #RansomwareNews #AirMilesEspaña #LoyaltyProgram #CyberSecurity #cyber-attack #PersonalData #databreach #TravelClub #Spain #GDPR
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Everest ransomware claims breach at Spain’s national airline Iberia with 596 GB data theft https://hackread.com/everest-ransomware-spai-airline-iberia-breach/ #AirMilesEspaña #Cybersecurity #CyberAttacks #CyberAttack #CyberCrime #Ransomware #Security #Everest #Iberia #Spain