New phishing technique
New phishing technique
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Latest phishing scam silent but violent

Just open an email and you could be the next victim, warns security firm

Dinah Greek, Computeract!ve 04 Nov 2004
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Security experts are warning of a new phishing technique designed to capture online banking details without requiring users to click on a website link.

According to security firm MessageLabs, all potential victims have to do is simply open an email, which then silently runs a script that attempts to rewrite the host files of targeted machines.

The next time the user attempts legitimately to access their online bank they will be automatically redirected to a fraudulent website, enabling their log-in details to be stolen.

The risk is currently low, according to MessageLabs, which has only intercepted copies of emails targeting three Brazilian banks.

However, Mark Murtah, head of emerging threats at security company Websense, expects the threat to increase as phishers use more sophisticated techniques.

"There is a growing awareness among computer users about the dangers of phishing, so they are more suspicious," he said.

"The phishers know this, so we are beginning to see increasingly sophisticated scams that are very hard to detect.

"Something as innocent as using the auto-preview function in an email client is enough to download malicious code or silent key-loggers. And antivirus software will not necessarily pick up the fact someone has been infected."

Computer users can defend themselves against this if they ensure that Windows Scripting Host is disabled.

See also:

Email masquerades as official software updateBank suspend elements of its online service to protect customers  17 Nov 2004
Ken YoungOnline trade could be irreparably damaged unless firms do more to combat scams  17 Nov 2004
Trojan targets UK online banksBanker-AJ Trojan sends passwords and screenshots to remote hackers  11 Nov 2004
Social engineeringStudy reveals junk mail tactics becoming ever more sophisticated  10 Nov 2004
Internet content spoofing scamISA Server 2000 and Proxy Server 2.0 affected by internet spoofing scam  10 Nov 2004
IE buffer overflow vulnerabilitySecurity group warns users to patch against buffer overflow vulnerability  05 Nov 2004
Neil BarrettMost online scams are laughably crude, but they could be a lot more devious  04 Nov 2004
Fraudsters are trying to recruit UK computer users as money launderers  03 Nov 2004
Can-Spam lawsuitsSoftware giant joins AOL, EarthLink and Yahoo!  29 Oct 2004
Trojan53 people arrested in Brazil for online banking fraud  21 Oct 2004
SecurityThe latest wave of cyber-crimes and acts of vandalism have demonstrated once again that many systems are still vulnerable to attack.  15 Apr 2004

All Hacking and Cyber-crime

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