Cyber Crime Police Stations in India

1. Mumbai

Assistant Commissioner of Police
Cyber Crime Investigation Cell
Office of Commissioner of Police office,
Annex -3 Building, 1st floor,
Near Crawford Market, Mumbai-01.

+91-22-22630829
+91-22-22641261

Web site: http://www.cybercellmumbai.com
E-mail id: officer@cybercellmumbai.com
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2. Chennai

Assistant Commissioner of Police
Cyber Crime Cell
Commissioner office Campus
Egmore, Chennai- 600008

+91-40-5549 8211
E-mail id: s.balu@nic.in

For Rest of Tamil Nadu,
Address: Cyber Crime Cell, CB, CID, Chennai

E-mail id: cbcyber@tn.nic.in
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3. Bangalore

Cyber Crime Police Station
C.O.D Headquarters,
Carlton House,
# 1, Palace Road,
Bangalore – 560 001

+91-80-2220 1026
+91-80-2294 3050
+91-80-2238 7611 (FAX)

Web site: http://www.cyberpolicebangalore.nic.in/
Email-id: ccps@blr.vsnl.net.in, ccps@kar.nic.in
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4. Hyderabad

Cyber Crime Police Station
Crime Investigation Department,
3rd Floor, D.G.P. Pffice, Lakdikapool,
Hyderabad – 500004

+91-40-2324 0663
+91-40-2785 2274
+91-40-2329 7474 (Fax)



Web site: http://www.cidap.gov.in/cybercrimes.aspx
E-mail id: cidap@cidap.gov.in, info@cidap.gov.in
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5. Delhi

CBI Cyber Crime Cell:
Superintendent of Police,
Cyber Crime Investigation Cell
Central Bureau of Investigation,
5th Floor, Block No.3, CGO Complex,
Lodhi Road, New Delhi – 3

+91-11-4362203
+91-11-4392424

Web site: http://cbi.nic.in/
E-Mail: cbiccic@bol.net.in
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6. Thane

3rd Floor, Police Commissioner Office
Near Court Naka, Thane West,
Thane 400601.

+91-22-25424444

Web site: www.thanepolice.org
E-Mail: police@thanepolice.org

7. Pune
Assistant Commissioner of Police
Cyber Crime Investigation Cell
Police Commissioner Office of Pune
2, Sadhu Vaswani Road, Camp,
Pune 411001

+91-20-2612 7277
+91-20-2616 5396
+91-20-2612 8105 (Fax)

Web site: http://punepolice.com/crime branch.html
E-Mail: punepolice@vsnl.com
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8. Gujarat
DIG, CID, Crime and Railways
Fifth Floor
Police Bhavan
Sector 18, Gandhinagar 382 018

+91-79-2325 4384
+91-79-2325 3917 (FAX)

Flame virus warning

Microsoft issues Flame virus warning
Microsoft warned that a bug in Windows allowed PCs across the Middle East to become infected with the Flame virus and released a software fix to fight the espionage tool that surfaced last week.
Security experts said they were both surprised and impressed by the approach that the attackers had used, which was to disguise Flame as a legitimate program built by Microsoft. Kaspersky Lab, one of the researchers who helped to discover the Flame virus.
The creators of the virus obtained that certificate by manipulating a component of the Windows operating system known as terminal services licensing, or TS licensing, that is designed to authorize business customers to use advanced features of Windows. 
A bug in TS licensing allowed the hackers to use it to create fake certificates that identified Flame as being from Microsoft, Mike Reavey, a senior director with Microsoft's Security Response Center, said in a blog post. 
He feared that other hackers might be able to copy the technique to launch more widespread attacks with other types of viruses, Reavey said. 
"We continue to investigate this issue and will take any appropriate actions to help protect customers," Reavey said in the blog post. 
News of the Flame virus, which surfaced a week ago, generated headlines around the world as researchers said that technical evidence suggests it was built on behalf of the same nation or nations that commissioned the Stuxnet worm that attacked Iran's nuclear program in 2010. Researchers are still gathering information about the virus. 
Microsoft's warning is available at blogs.technet.com/b/msrc/

Change passwords on LinkedIn Now


If you have a LinkedIn account, now's a good time to change your password. Up to 6.5 million user accounts and encrypted passwords have reportedly been leaked and posted to a Russian hacker site.
LinkedIn hasn't confirmed the passwords have been stolen, but did confirm on its Twitter account they're looking into it. The leak comes off the news that LinkedIn's mobile apps transmit personal data, including meeting notes and calendar info in plain text. Regardless of whether the leak is confirmed or not, it's a good time to change your password. To do so, go straight to the LinkedIn Change Password page (you'll need to be logged in), enter a new, secure password, and click Change Password.
   LinkedIn has confirmed that some of the compromised passwords are LinkedIn accounts. If your password was compromised your account password has already been made invalid and you'll receive an email with instructions for how to reset your password (you can also double-check here: LeakedIn). If you use the same password and email address for other websites as you did with LinkedIn make sure you change those as well.