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Honeynet Revealing Actual Phishing Techniques

edsonie writes "CircleID is reporting on the recent Honeynet Project, 'Know your Enemy: Phishing', aimed at discovering practical information on the practice of phishing. The study reports on a number of real world examples of phishing attacks and the typical activities performed by attackers during the full lifecycle of such incidents. The research also suggests that phishing attacks "are becoming more widespread and well organized". Also with regards to the speed of such attacks, "phishing attacks can occur very rapidly, with only limited elapsed time between the initial system intrusion and a phishing web site going online with supporting spam messages to advertise the web site, and that this speed can make such attacks hard to track and prevent." Check out the full report here presenting actual techniques and tools used by phishers."

11 of 155 comments (clear)

  1. Actual techniques by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I've discovered that these Phishers ask questions and stupid people give them answers.

    Lets not make it into brain surgery. Do we need honeynets to tell us there are stupid people out there? And there always will be stupid people out there.

  2. The best defense... by LegendOfLink · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...is still the education of users. I can't tell you how many e-mails get stuck in our company SPAM filters that mimick phony PayPal accounts. You get that one user who thinks the message is real, and there goes your identity.

  3. Bad definition. by Chmarr · · Score: 4, Insightful
    From the article:
    The term phishing ("password harvesting fishing")...


    "Password harvested fishing"??? What a crock! The 'ph' is just a 'cooler' version of an 'f'. Like 'phreaking' or 'phat'.

    Someone clearly tried too figure out where the term came from, and completely missed the obvioius :)
  4. They're getting MUCH better at it by DG · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That might have been true once upon a time, but the phishers are getting VERY good at hiding their phish.

    I've seen a PayPal phish that was very sophisticated, doing things like putting bogus info into the URL bar, duplicating the layout of PayPal's site EXACTLY... it turned out to be very difficult to spot the smoking gun - I had to go look at the raw HTML to find it.

    Had I not been as paranoid as I am, it could have easily suckered me.

    Read the article, and follow some of the links to the actual attacks. It's amazing how good they are. (It's equally amazing that a web browser would do anything on link mouseover EXCEPT show the real target of a link!)

    Yes, there are plenty of stupid people - some people actually buy products from spam, or send money to Nigeria, etc etc. But the quality of the phishers is getting so good that it is hard to tell (in some cases) what is valid or what is not.

    DG

    --
    Want to learn about race cars? Read my Book
    1. Re:They're getting MUCH better at it by DrEldarion · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's the thing, though. It doesn't matter HOW official it looks, people should ALWAYS distrust anyone asking for sensitive information like that. The majority of people are FAR too trusting.

      The advice I always give people is if it looks like it could be real, call the company and check. Not one has been real so far.

  5. Strange Phenomenon by Nytewynd · · Score: 5, Insightful
    One thing I don't understand about phishing is why it works so well. I imagine it is probably just the volume of the attacks, so they are more likely to catch an idiot than in the past.

    Consider:
    1. Most people wouldn't give out a credit card number randomly over the phone
    2. Most people wouldn't return junk mail that asked for a social security number
    3. Most people wouldn't walk up to a complete stranger on the street and hand them their ATM card and PIN

    I think computers mystify older people to the point where they lose their mind. I see it in general. My friend's father-in-law had a "computer question" for me about ebay. He wanted me to tell him how to determine the price he should sell something for. I tried to explain to him that his question had nothing to do with ebay itself, but he was so caught up in the process of selling on ebay, he was totally confused.

    Maybe phishing works so well because some people are so confused by computers in general, they simply assume that their bank would ask them for this information over email (from an account named bank_stealer@hotmail.com).

    Dealing with this kind of leads to the appropriate saying:

    You can give a man a fish and feed him for a day, or teach him to fish and feed him for the rest of his life.

    You can't get rid of phishing by blocking sites. You have to do it by educating people not to enter their info.
    --
    /. ++
    1. Re:Strange Phenomenon by Have+Blue · · Score: 3, Insightful
      It's not that simple. Consider the following situations:
      1. You receive a phone call. The caller ID says it is from a firm you do business with frequently. The caller informs you that there is a problem with the credit information for your most recent order, and that you must provide it again. Maybe you really do have a most recent order with that company, and it's plausible that human error somewhere in the process resulted in your CC info getting damaged (the order was placed over the phone, or in person). Maybe this is for a pretty important item that you can't spend extra days waiting for if there really is a problem with your order.
      2. You receive a letter on what appears to be official government letterhead, with a return address that could plausibly be a government office in the state capitol. The letter informs you that you are in danger of noncompliance with obscure regulations, and includes a form to fill out so that the agency will, for a small fee, send you materials you need to remain in the clear and avoid harsh penalties.
      3. You are standing in line at a bank waiting to see a clerk. A person approaches you wearing the uniform of a bank employee and carrying papers that look like bank documents and offers to help you. He leads you to an empty desk and walks you through the task you would like to have performed, and tells you the process will be completed in a day or two. You leave without noting his name.
      All of these situations could easily occur in real life and all of them could easily be scams. Unless you are automatically paranoid at all times or willing to go out of your way to spend time on verification, chances are you'd fall for at least one of them. We got one of the second type at work the other day- it was very convincing, and in all honesty if it was my responsibility to handle it I would have been taken in.
  6. Re:Speed? by sharp-bang · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Try complaining to the bank or other business being targeted, and identify the ISP in your complaint.

    As papers like this one reveal the methods of phishers, it's going to be much more difficult for ISPs to claim ignorance of the problem, because knowledge of tools and methods contribute to standards of due care from which liability arises. The threat of legal action might improve the overall response.

    --
    #!
  7. Re:Internet Darwinism by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You bank is never going to ask you for your account number over email. They already have it!

    Part of the reason this social engineering is successful is that companies, banks, large organizations are so lousy at keeping accurate records. Have you never had a bank screw up your name, or your balance, or some other company you do business with charge you for something you never ordered or fail to charge you for something you have ordered? I've had all these things happen, and it makes it completely unsurprising that a bank would lose your information or even have a policy of verifying your account password via e-mail. It is ridiculous and insecure and generally a really stupid idea, which is why it seems plausible that some lumbering bureaucracy would do it. Obviously, I would never give out sensitive information via e-mail, but I would actually not be surprised if some company requested it via that method. Just because it looks like phishing, does not mean it is, it could just be someone being really dumb. There is plenty of blame to go around here.

  8. Re:Internet Darwinism by NetSettler · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Anyone that falls for a phishing scam is too dumb to have their money anyway.

    I would venture a guess that among the vulnerable are the parents and/or grandparents of most of the people who read Slashdot. You don't see an ethical obligation on the party of the technically savvy to care about and protect the technically unsavvy? Shame on you.

    Software can be anything we make it be. The technologists who have shaped the world have made many choices and will continue to make choices about what our programs will and won't do, how information will be presented, etc. They make those choices on behalf of the public, and they cannot simply shirk responsibility in this way.

    Almost all technological problems of this kind reduce to our desire to get as far as possible as fast as possible, and damn any ill side-effects. If browsers required you to know and approve each site before you connected to it, this wouldn't happen. "But that would slow us all down," I can hear you say. The world needs this now, now, now. Indeed, we get benefits by not holding back. But we get ill effects, too, and we can't just poo poo those as not our responsibility. They follow directly from the design decisions we make on behalf of our parents and friends, people who often don't know we're making them nor the consequences of their having been made.

    If we spent half as much time, energy, and intellect solving social problems as we do solving technical ones, I suspect the world would be happier.

    --

    Kent M Pitman
    Philosopher, Technologist, Writer

  9. Easier way by int999 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What prevents someone from simply setting up an online store site, complete with pictures of items and everything, and with rockbottom prices? Run it for a week, collect credit card numbers from orders, then close shop. If you do it right, it can be untraceable.