Maple Disruption 2025
Overview
Maple Disruption 2025 is a cross-sector initiative aimed at disrupting or degrading key enablers that fraudsters and cybercriminals rely on to commit their crimes, including malicious email addresses, phone numbers, bank accounts, cryptocurrency accounts.
For this year’s sprint, the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre (CAFC) and the RCMP’s National Cybercrime Coordination Centre (NC3) have brought together fraud fighters from over 25 partner organizations, including financial institutions, telecommunications services, tech companies, cryptocurrency exchanges, government agencies, non-profit organizations, academic institutions and more.
Nobody can fight fraud and cybercrime alone. By drawing on the expertise of various sectors, law enforcement is better able to understand every angle of the crimes threatening Canadians online, helping us shut them down before they hit home.
Partners
- Alberta Securities Commission
- Autorité des marchés financiers
- BMO Financial Group
- Central 1
- Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC)
- Competition Bureau Canada
- Canada Revenue Agency (CRA)
- Desjardins
- Equifax Canada Co.
- Google, LLC
- Interac
- Meta
- Microsoft
- National Bank of Canada
- NCFTA
- NDAX Canada Inc.
- NetBeacon Institute/Public Interest Registry
- Ontario Securities Commission
- Ottawa Police Service
- RCMP Federal Policing Cybercrime
- RCMP Federal Policing Financial Crime
- Royal Bank of Canada
- Scotiabank
- Sun Life
- Sûreté du Québec
- Toronto-Dominion Bank
- Université de Montréal – Clinique de cyber-criminologie
Reporting
The RCMP, NC3 and CAFC strongly recommend that anyone who has experienced or witnessed a fraud or cybercrime contact their local police immediately. It is also important for you to report the incident online at Report Cybercrime and Fraud or by phone at 1-888-495-8501.
Want to help efforts like Maple Disruption? Public reporting is critical to an effective response from police and cybersecurity partners. The information gathered from reports helps us form a more complete picture of how cybercrime and fraud are affecting Canadians and strategically focus our resources on prevention, awareness, and disruption efforts.
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