AWS probably wouldn’t do anything, assuming a human has signed their name to the account, there might be policy against doing anything. But if you called the NSA/cybercom instead, they probably would do something given that they’ve been dealing with botnets and foreign hackers for decades.
Again, it depends a whole lot on the details. NSA or the like probably already know, but both AWS and the NSA will act if the account is committing crimes or actually doing something wrong, and both probably don’t do much if it’s “just” a rogue copyright violation that no human is running.
Also, the details about how you know this is happening, and nobody else can see any evidence of it, matter a whole lot to how the scenario plays out.
AWS probably wouldn’t do anything, assuming a human has signed their name to the account, there might be policy against doing anything. But if you called the NSA/cybercom instead, they probably would do something given that they’ve been dealing with botnets and foreign hackers for decades.
Again, it depends a whole lot on the details. NSA or the like probably already know, but both AWS and the NSA will act if the account is committing crimes or actually doing something wrong, and both probably don’t do much if it’s “just” a rogue copyright violation that no human is running.
Also, the details about how you know this is happening, and nobody else can see any evidence of it, matter a whole lot to how the scenario plays out.