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Phishing Continues to Get More Sophisticated

By February 21, 2017No Comments

Phishing continues to get more sophisticated. Recently, we’ve seen several sophisticated phishing attacks attempting to harvest a target’s Gmail credentials.  Below, we’ll do a quick breakdown of each one, and how you can continue to protect yourself in the future.  While the attack examples below were targeted at Gmail accounts, these can easily be used across many different platforms as well.

Phishing Continues to Get More Sophisticated

Phishing by Obfuscation

The following sophisticated phish has been making the rounds.  Like any other phish, it may appear to come from a trusted person (or may actually be coming from a trusted person who has been hacked) and usually contains an image of an attachment that you’d want to view.  Many of us know to be wary and to check the URL before entering credentials right?  Well, in this case, it’s not so cut-and-dried and is successfully fooling users knowledgeable in phishing attacks.

Mark Maunder of Wordfence explains how this is managing to fool even tech-savvy users.  You click on the image, expecting Gmail to give you a preview of the attachment. Instead, a new tab opens up and you are prompted by Gmail to sign in again. You glance at the location bar and you see accounts.google.com in there. It looks like this….

picture2

During a hectic day, on a mobile device, or to someone distracted at the time; a quick glance at the URL doesn’t give off the normal red-flags.  There is no not-secure warning before the address, which usually alerts on any non-SSL site.  Also, it doesn’t appear to be pointing to a fake URL such as security-google.com. 

Once you’ve logged in, you’re presented with an actual document, but your account credentials have been compromised.  What many missed when they saw the Gmail login page was the obfuscated code that opens up the credential harvesting page.  If a user were to view the full URL (by scrolling past all the white space) they would see it was not a legitimate login page.

picture3

Phishing by Building Rapport

Recently, another similar phishing attack is stealing credentials through another fake Gmail login page.  The difference is that these phishes are more targeted, and the assailant built a rapport with the target prior to releasing the attack.  Attackers created an entire online presence for a female called Safeena Malik.  She had a LinkedIn account with over 500 connections, and also Facebook and Google accounts that were active and regularly communicated with the targets before the phish was sent.

After “trust” had been established over a period of time, Safeena sent an email promising that an attached document contained valuable information.  Again, to view the document, targets were prompted to log in to a fake Gmail page where their credentials were stolen.  However, since this was coming from a source that seemed legitimate, many users probably didn’t bother to verify the URL before logging in.

Don’t Become a Victim to These Attacks

  • Always double-check the URL before clicking on it and/or entering information. It may appear to be from a trusted source, but that source may be compromised or entirely fabricated.  Best practice is to manually navigate to a known, good URL for logging in.
  • Activate Two Factor Authentication (2FA) on any accounts that have it available. Assailants may be able to get your password via one of these attacks, but 2FA will help prevent them from logging in and stealing data or taking over your account.
  • Don’t reuse passwords across sites. If your password does get compromised, at least it can’t be used to hack into other accounts as well.

Sources:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/thomasbrewster/2017/02/14/safeena-malik-qatar-fake-cyberespionage-hacking-campaign/#1f3c927b12af
https://www.wordfence.com/blog/2017/01/gmail-phishing-data-uri/

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Security Assessment Case Study
Learn more about the importance of a Social Engineering Risk Assessment.
Security Assessment Case Study
Learn more about the importance of a Social Engineering Risk Assessment.
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Vishing and Phishing Must Be Ongoing to Be Effective
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Vishing (voice-based phishing) has been a problem for quite a long time. There are many vendors in the marketplace that offer vishing services. However they tend to use robo-callers or call centers for large volume engagements. If they are using trained humans to make calls, it is likely in very low numbers.
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Your company is important. Indeed, the data you hold for your clients or employees is very valuable and attackers seek to capitalize on that data any way they can. This is where a Social Engineering Risk Assessment (SERA) engagement can help uncover possible vulnerability to attackers.
Benefits of a Social-Engineering Risk Assessment Engagement
Your company is important. Indeed, the data you hold for your clients or employees is very valuable and attackers seek to capitalize on that data any way they can. This is where a Social Engineering Risk Assessment (SERA) engagement can help uncover possible vulnerability to attackers.
The Business Value of the Social-Engineer Phishing Service
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The Business Value of the Social-Engineer Phishing Service
Cybercriminals are targeting the human element of organizations. Additionally, they are developing techniques to use an organization’s employees as the first point of entry. According to the 2021 Verizon DBIR report, of the 3,841 security breaches reported using social engineering, phishing was the key vector for over 80% of them.