Security experts have warned of an outbreak of malicious spam emails that use
log-in account confirmation details as a hook to get users to visit an infected
website.
The
Marshal
TRACE threat research team said that the emails appear to come from a
legitimate organisation and provide recipients with temporary log-in
confirmation details for a website.
The spam uses text like 'for security purposes, please login and change the
temporary Login ID and Password', and include a link to an IP address which is
in fact a website infected with the
Storm
Trojan.
The messages appear to come from the technical support departments of a range
of organisations with names designed to generate interest among the public, such
as 'Joke-A-Day' and 'Web Players'. The links appear as a numerical IP address
rather than a URL.
"We are seeing significant volumes of 'confirmation spam' hitting inboxes,"
said Bradley Anstis, director of product management at Marshal.
"This outbreak is the latest in a string of social engineering tactics used
by the same individuals responsible for the Storm Trojan to propagate their
botnet.
"These criminals are clever and highly adaptive. This is simply their latest
attempt to fool unsuspecting email users into infecting themselves."
The Storm Trojan first appeared in January 2007. It quickly achieved success
and notoriety by using the guise of current affairs headlines to fool
unsuspecting recipients into clicking on a link which led to the Trojan.
Examples of the headlines used included 'Saddam Hussein alive!' and 'Chinese
missile shot down by USA aircraft'.
Since then the criminals behind the Trojan have used greeting cards to infect
computers with subjects ranging from the 4th of July to Thank You cards.
"The 'confirmation spam' outbreak has been launched by the same group that
launched the Hot Pictures spam campaign earlier in the week," said Anstis.
"Previously these spam campaigns, like the greeting card campaign, would last
for weeks at a time. Now, spammers are modifying or launching new spam campaigns
almost daily.
"Our advice to anyone who receives a message like this from a person they do
not know, or have not heard from for a long time, is to delete it without
opening it.
"Certainly, do not click on the link in the message and do not click 'OK' if
it asks to download a file."
Further details and advice on the Storm Trojan can be found on Marshal's
TRACE
Center website.
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