two of the world 's biggest companies was arrested on fraud charges GOOGLE and Facebook have admitted they were conned outAttack.Phishingof an alleged $ 100million ( £77million ) in a phishing scamAttack.Phishing. The two world 's biggest companies fell victim after a Lithuanian man allegedly trickedAttack.Phishingemployees into wiring over the money to bank accounts that he controlled , Fortune reported on Thursday . Evaldas Rimasauskas , 48 , is accused of posing asAttack.Phishingan Asia-based manufacturer and deceivedAttack.Phishingthe internet giants from around 2013 until 2015 . He was arrested earlier this month in Lithuania at the request of US authorities The conman is said to have forgedAttack.Phishingemail addresses , invoices and corporate stamps to impersonateAttack.PhishingQuanta and trickAttack.Phishingthem into paying for computer supplies . Rimasauskas , who is awaiting extradition proceedings , has denied the allegations . The US Department of Justice ( DOJ ) said last month : `` Fraudulent phishing emails were sentAttack.Phishingto employees and agents of the victim companies , which regularly conducted multi-million-dollar transactions with [ the Asian ] company . '' Both Facebook and Google have confirmed the fraud and said that they had been able to recoup funds . But they did n't reveal how much money it had transferred and recouped . A Google spokeswoman said : `` We detected this fraud against our vendor management team and promptly alerted the authorities . '' `` We recouped the funds and we ’ re pleased this matter is resolved . '' A spokeswoman for Facebook added : `` Facebook recovered the bulk of the funds shortly after the incident and has been cooperating with law enforcement in its investigation . '' Security experts said the recent cyber attack highlighted how sophisticated phishing scamsAttack.Phishingare being used to foolAttack.Phishingeven two of the biggest tech companies .