IDF foils attempts by Hamas to set cyber traps for soldiers July 3, 2018An IDF ad warning about Hamas' efforts to target soldiers with malware. (IDF)IDFIDF foils attempts by Hamas to set cyber traps for soldiers Tweet WhatsApp Email https://worldisraelnews.com/hamas-lures-idf-soldiers-with-dating-apps-and-world-cup-content/ Email Print Earlier detection by the IDF blocked an attempt by Hamas’s cyber terrorists to lure IDF soldiers into revealing sensitive information. By: TPS and World Israel News Staff Cyber terrorists associated with Hamas have been involved with trying to lure IDF soldiers into downloading a Hamas-generated mobile phone app that would give the terror group access to soldiers’ personal information, allow them to retrieve sensitive security information, and remotely install malicious applications that could turn mobile phones into weapons.In a statement Tuesday, the IDF Spokesman’s Unit announced that the army had launched Operation Broken Heart to combat the threat.According to the IDF, about 100 soldiers fell for the trap, downloading spyware to various devices, with no damage reported to Israeli security.In January 2018, a report surfaced about a suspicious figure on Facebook named Lina Kramer, who had a conversation with a soldier on Facebook and later on Whatsapp, listing an Israeli phone number.But instead of trying to entice the soldier to download a virus through an illegitimate source, the individual asked the soldier to download an app called “GlanceLove.”“Not long after the first attacker approached us, we’d already begun receiving dozens of reports from soldiers about suspicious figures and apps on social networks,” said Colonel A., the Head of the Information Security Department.Read Hamas celebrates ICC arrest warrants and urges the court to 'expand its scope' to all Israeli leaders“Upon investigating the reports, we uncovered hostile infrastructure that Hamas tried to use to keep in contact with IDF soldiers and tempt them to download apps that were harmful, and use the soldiers to extract classified information,” he added.“I got a message on Facebook that looked innocent at first, from someone named Lina Kramer,” added L., an infantry soldier.“We started talking on Facebook, then we moved to Whatsapp, and then she asked me to download an app called GlanceLove. When I looked at her profile, I saw that it had content, and that she had an Israeli phone number.” EspionageHamasSocial media