Malware purveyors are embracing the upcoming Olympic Games wholeheartedly.
Recent outbreaks of attacks are attempting to lure in victims with promise of
news and information on the Beijing Games and researchers only see the trend
increasing over the coming weeks.
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One of the most recent attacks is specifically targeting national sporting
organisations and athlete representative groups.
The attacks are disguised as a dispatch from the International Olympic
Committee (IOC) and contain a trojan hidden as a PDF press release. According to
security firm
MessageLabs, the
content in the attack may have been lifted directly from official IOC documents.
When the malicious attachment is launched, the user is infected with a trojan
that logs and updates sensitive data.
The use of supposedly official documents has been a favourite technique for
targeted 'spear-phishing' attacks. Similar attacks have attempted to spoof the
US Internal Revenue Service and Department of Justice.
Last month, the Storm worm also used the promise of Olympic news to convince
users to install its botnet-controlling software.
Researchers are predicting that the trend will only get worse as the opening
ceremony and the games themselves kick off.
"Cybercrooks have already taken advantage of the world's attention on the
Beijing Games with malware and data-thieving phishing attacks,” said
McAfee research and
communications director Dave Marcus.
"With only days left until the Olympic Games kick off, the number of attacks
is likely to increase and continue as the event progresses."
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