Overview
- Chair Alexander Bastrykin says the agency is developing systems to identify patterns of criminal behavior using data from case materials.
- He emphasizes that AI outputs should not be treated as decisive in matters affecting a person’s fate and must remain under human control.
- The cybercrime unit employs in‑house facial recognition, digital‑trace analysis, video enhancement, and big‑data tools to support investigations.
- Investigators use Rosfinmonitoring software to track cryptocurrency transactions and work with major Russian IT firms on complex technical issues.
- Officials note a rise in internet‑enabled crimes and warn that offenders use AI voice and image fakes and anonymization across borders, as 34,500 IT cases were investigated in three years with thefts most common.