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네덜란드, 800대 서버 압수 및 사이버 공격 방조 혐의 2명 체포

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핵심 요약

네덜란드 당국이 러시아의 유럽 내 사이버 공격 및 정보전에 악용된 호스팅 업체 공동 소유주 2명을 체포하고 800여 대의 서버를 압수했습니다. 이들은 EU 제재를 받은 '스타크 인더스트리즈(Stark Industries)'의 인프라를 우회적으로 운영하며 러시아 해킹 단체를 지원한 혐의를 받고 있습니다. 이번 조치는 국가 지원 사이버 위협 세력의 활동 거점을 차단했다는 점에서 글로벌 사이버 안보에 중요한 의미를 갖습니다.

번역된 본문

네덜란드 당국이 러시아의 유럽연합(EU) 내 사이버 공격, 영향력 작전, 허위 정보 캠페인에 사용된 IT 인프라를 운영한 혐의로 두 개의 관련 인터넷 호스팅 회사의 공동 소유주를 체포했습니다.

이 두 남성은 2025년 크라이슨시큐리티(KrebsOnSecurity) 보도의 핵심 인물이었습니다. 해당 보도에 따르면, 이들이 운영하는 호스팅 회사들은 러시아 정보기관의 사이버 범죄에 자주 사용되는 거점으로 작년에 EU의 제재를 받은 인터넷 서비스 제공업체인 '스타크 인더스트리즈 솔루션(Stark Industries Solutions)'의 기술적 인프라를 장악한 것으로 드러났습니다. 네덜란드 금융범죄수사국(FIOD) 소속 수사관이 압수수색 과정에서 모습을 드러냈습니다. (이미지 제공: FIOD)

네덜란드 일간지 데 볼크스크란트(de Volkskrant)에 따르면, 네덜란드 금융범죄수사국(FIOD)은 5월 18일 암스테르담에 거주하는 57세 남성과 헤이그에 거주하는 39세 남성을 체포했습니다. 이들은 EU 제재 대상 기업에 직간접적으로 경제적 자원을 제공하여 제재 법률을 위반한 혐의를 받고 있습니다.

네덜란드 수사는 러시아가 우크라이나를 침공하기 불과 2주 전에 갑자기 나타난 거대 호스팅 업체인 '스타크 인더스트리즈'에 초점을 맞추고 있습니다. 2024년 5월 심층 보도에서 자세히 다루었듯이, 스타크는 유럽 표적에 대한 대규모 분산 서비스 거부(DDoS) 공격의 출처가 되었으며, 러시아 지원 해킹 그룹과 연관된 사이버 공격에 반복적으로 사용되는 최고 수준의 프록시 및 익명 서비스 제공업체로 부상했습니다.

해당 보고서는 몰도바 출신 형제인 이반 네쿨리티(Ivan Neculiti)와 유리 네쿨리티(Yuri Neculiti), 그리고 그들의 회사인 'PQHosting'을 지목했습니다. 이들은 스타크가 외부 인터넷과 연결되는 두 가지 주요 통로 중 하나를 제공하고 있었습니다. 2025년 5월, EU는 러시아의 하이브리드 전쟁 노력을 지원한 혐의로 PQHosting과 네쿨리티 형제에게 제재를 가했습니다.

하지만 크라이슨시큐리티가 2025년 9월에 지적했듯이, 이러한 제재는 스타크의 남은 인터넷 연결망인 네덜란드 기반 인터넷 서비스 제공업체 'MIRhosting'을 겨냥하지 못했습니다. MIRhosting은 러시아 출신의 39세 안드레이 네스테렌코(Andrey Nesterenko)가 네덜란드에서 운영하는 기업입니다.

PQHosting과 네쿨리티 형제가 EU의 제재를 받을 것이라는 소식은 작년에 제재가 공식 발표되기 거의 2주 전에 언론을 통해 유출되었습니다. 그 기간 동안 스타크의 네트워크 자산은 PQHosting에서 네덜란드 법인 'WorkTitans BV'가 통제하는 새로운 법인인 'the[.]hosting'으로 이전되었습니다.

또한 2025년 9월 보고서에서 확인된 바와 같이, WorkTitans는 네스테렌코와 암스테르담에 거주하는 57세 유세프 지나드(Youssef Zinad)가 통제하고 있었습니다. 그뿐만 아니라, WorkTitans는 지나드가 이전에 근무했던 MIRhosting을 통해서만 외부 인터넷과 연결되고 있었습니다.

5월 18일, 네덜란드 금융범죄 수사관들은 네스테렌코와 지나드를 체포하고 엔스헤데(Enschede)와 알메레(Almere)에 있는 3개의 사업장, 드론텐(Dronten)과 스히폴-레이크(Schiphol-Rijk)에 있는 2개의 데이터센터를 압수수색했습니다. 네덜란드 당국의 성명에 따르면 노트북, 휴대전화 및 800대 이상의 서버 또한 압수했습니다.

800대의 서버가 네덜란드 당국에 압수된 직후, the-hosting 고객들에게 전달된 메시지에는 안타깝게도 서버에 저장된 데이터가 유실되어 복구할 수 없다는 내용이 담겨 있었습니다.

데 볼크스크란트는 검토한 데이터를 통해, 2025년 11월 13일부터 19일까지 덴마크 지방 선거 기간 동안 친러시아 세력이 덴마크 정부 기관을 공격하는 데 가장 많이 사용된 네트워크가 WorkTitans와 MIRhosting이었음을 확인했습니다.

해당 매체는 네스테렌코가 체포되기 전, MIRhosting 설립자로서 자신의 서버가 친러시아 사이버 범죄자들에게 오용되었다는 사실을 알지 못했다고 부인했다고 전했습니다. 데 볼크스크란트는 그가 "2025년 5월 EU 제재가 발효되었을 때 네쿨리티 형제와의 모든 서비스 계약을 종료했다"고 말했으며, "'유해하고 잘못된 보도'에 대해 조치를 취할 모든 권리를 보유한다"고 밝혔다고 보도했습니다.

MIRhosting은 성명을 통해 덴마크 선거와 관련된 의혹에 대한 내부 조사를 시작했으며, 일시적으로 (관련 서비스를 중단한다고) 밝혔습니다.

원문 보기
원문 보기 (영어)
Authorities in the Netherlands have arrested the co-owners of two related Internet hosting companies for operating IT infrastructure used by Russia to carry out cyberattacks, influence operations and disinformation campaigns inside the European Union. The two men were the focus of a 2025 KrebsOnSecurity story about how their hosting companies had assumed control over the technical infrastructure of Stark Industries Solutions , an Internet service provider sanctioned last year by the EU as a frequent staging ground for cyber mischief from Russia's intelligence agencies. An investigator with the Tax Intelligence and Investigation Service (FIOD), the Dutch financial crimes agency, during the raid. Image: FIOD. The Dutch daily news outlet de Volkskrant reports that the Dutch financial crime agency FIOD on May 18 arrested a 57-year-old from Amsterdam and a 39-year-old from The Hague, charging them with violating sanctions law by directly or indirectly making economic resources available to EU-sanctioned entities. The Dutch investigation focuses on Stark Industries, a sprawling hosting provider that materialized just two weeks before Russia invaded Ukraine. As detailed in this May 2024 deep-dive , Stark quickly became the source of massive distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks against European targets, and emerged as a top supplier of proxy and anonymity services that showed up time and again in cyberattacks linked to Russia-backed hacking groups. That report identified two Moldovan brothers — Ivan and Yuri Neculiti and their company PQHosting — who were providing one of Stark's two main conduits to the larger Internet. In May 2025, the EU sanctioned PQHosting and the Neculiti brothers for aiding Russia's hybrid warfare efforts. But as KrebsOnSecurity observed in September 2025 , those sanctions failed to target Stark's remaining connection to the Internet — an Internet service provider based in the Netherlands called MIRhosting . MIRhosting is operated by Andrey Nesterenko , a 39-year-old Russian native who runs the business out of the Netherlands. News that PQHosting and the Neculiti brothers were about to be sanctioned by the EU leaked in the media nearly two weeks before the sanctions were announced last year. During that time, the Stark network assets were transferred from PQHosting to a new entity called the[.]hosting , under the control of the Dutch entity WorkTitans BV . And as our September 2025 report showed, WorkTitans was controlled by Nesterenko and a 57-year-old from Amsterdam named Youssef Zinad . On top of that, WorkTitans was getting connectivity to the larger Internet solely through MIRhosting, where Zinad had worked previously. On May 18, Dutch financial crime investigators arrested Nesterenko and Zinad, and searched three businesses in Enschede and Almere and two data centers in Dronten and Schiphol-Rijk. A statement from the Dutch authorities said they also seized laptops, telephones and more than 800 servers. A message to the-hosting customers immediately after 800 of its servers were seized by Dutch authorities. The message says that unfortunately data stored on the server has been lost and cannot be recovered. De Volkskrant said it reviewed data showing WorkTitans and MIRhosting were the most-used networks in pro-Russian attacks on Danish government bodies between November 13 and 19, 2025, the week of Denmark's municipal elections. The publication wrote that prior to Nesterenko's arrest, the MIRhosting founder denied that he knew his servers had been misused by pro-Russian cybercriminals. "He said he had ended all services with the Neculiti brothers when the EU sanctions came into force in May 2025," and the he "reserved all rights to take action against ‘harmful and incorrect publications," de Volkskrant wrote. MIRhosting released a statement saying it has initiated an internal investigation into the alleged facts concerning the elections in Denmark, and that it has temporarily paused services to WorkTitans as a precautionary measure while the matter is being reviewed further. "Based on our preliminary findings, there are no indications that the services over which we exercise control were actually used to influence the Danish elections," the statement reads. "No anomalies or spikes were observed in our network traffic during the period mentioned in the publication; had large-scale DDoS attacks occurred, such activity would have been evident. Furthermore, prior to the media publication, we had not received any complaints, abuse reports, or official requests regarding suspicious activities or misuse of our network. Meanwhile, our regular operational activities continue, and our service to our other clients remains fully intact." Born in Nizhny Novgorod, Russia, Mr. Nesterenko grew up as a piano prodigy who performed publicly at a young age. In 2004, Nesterenko founded MIRhosting's parent Innovation IT Solutions Corp. , which has the notable distinction of being the company responsible for hosting stopgeorgia[.]ru, a hacktivist website for organizing cyberattacks against Georgia that appeared at the same time Russian forces invaded the former Soviet nation in 2008. That conflict was thought to be the first war ever fought in which a notable cyberattack and an actual military engagement happened simultaneously. Responding to questions shared via email, Nesterenko said MIRhosting does not support cybercrime, sanctions evasion, or illegal activity, and that the allegations and arrest by Dutch authorities have been extremely harmful to him and his company. "The transition to the.hosting was not intended to evade sanctions," Nesterenko wrote. "The hardware and customer portfolio had already been transferred to WorkTitans before the sanctions appeared. Closing or damaging a legitimate Dutch infrastructure company will not stop cybercrime, but it will harm many people who have done nothing wrong." Far less is public about the 57-year-old Zinad, who reportedly has been keeping a low profile since our story last year. De Volkskrant reported that Zinad blocked access to his LinkedIn account, had gone months without responding to emails, WhatsApp messages and phone calls, and told a colleague that illness was forcing him to lead a somewhat more reclusive life. Mr. Zinad's now-defunct LinkedIn profile. It was full of posts for MIRhosting's services. Mr. Nesterenko claims Zinad was never an employee of MIRhosting. "He helped me and MIRhosting with certain business tasks under a normal business-to-business arrangement between companies," Nesterenko explained. However, in previous emails to KrebsOnSecurity, Nesterenko carbon copied Mr. Zinad (who had a @mirhosting.com email), explaining that he was part of the company's legal team. Also, the Dutch website stagemarkt[.]nl lists Youssef Zinad as an official contact for MIRhosting’s offices in Almere. Mr. Zinad has never responded to requests for comment. Nor did de Volkskrant have any luck tracking him down. The publication said it repeatedly asked Mr. Zinad (referred to here as simply "Z"), but he reportedly avoided every form of contact. "‘I am unavailable but will respond to your message as soon as possible,' reads an automated reply on WhatsApp on 2 October 2025," de Volkskrant reported. "It is the only response de Volkskrant would receive in months. He did not pick up his phone and did not call back. When an acquaintance asked him via LinkedIn to contact the reporter, he blocked access to his LinkedIn page. At an address in Almere where Z.'s personal limited company is registered, no one was present in April. The corner house's blinds were drawn, and a pile of rubbish bags lay outside next to a container, as if someone had recently left. A neighbour said he knew the man but did not know where he was staying. Z. was later arrested at a residence in Amsterdam."