Phishing
Cyber-crooks can now launch phishing attacks at no cost whatsoever

Cyber-crooks bank on free phishing kits

Downloadable tools found on the web

Written by Clement James

The number of phishing attacks increases due to the simplicity of the tools

Luis Corrons PandaLabs

Security experts have discovered free phishing kits on the internet which allow cyber-crooks to send fraudulent emails.

Panda Security's PandaLabs said that the tools allow cyber-crooks to spoof bank pages, online pay platforms, Gmail and Yahoo Mail accounts, online games and blogs.

"The really amazing thing is that these kits are free," said Luis Corrons, technical director of PandaLabs.

"The number of phishing attacks increases due to the simplicity of the tools, causing companies and consumers large losses. A recent Gartner study found that phishing attacks caused US consumer losses of $3.2bn in 2007."

After accessing a URL that contains the kits, the criminal can obtain two files to create a fraudulent mail.

One file allows them to spoof emails from banks and pay platforms, and the other allows them to create a fraudulent page that resembles the original. The kit also includes a free PHP program to send emails from the spoofed page.

The rest of the process is similar to other phishing attacks. The false email is sent to several mail addresses with a link to a malicious page at which users are requested to enter personal data such as email addresses and banking passwords.

"Cyber-crooks buy lists of addresses on the internet, although some are free, " said Corrons. "If we add free hosting services, the result is that cyber-crooks can launch phishing attacks at no cost whatsoever."

Tags:

Further reading

Phishers target Google AdWords users

Attack designed to steal sensitive data   More...

Third of UK surfers banking online

Brits seem unfazed by security concerns   More...

Infosec: Surfers wary of using credit cards online

Confidence plummets as attacks soar   More...

Infosec: Rock Phish threat deepens

Hugely successful malware gets a new twist   More...

Related articles

Zombie botnet targets iPhone buyers

'One of the most sophisticated' scams in recent times   More...

Experts warns of Banker Trojan peril

Primary threat to online shoppers this Christmas   More...

Cyber-criminals exploit Access flaw

Keylogger malware already being installed, says PandaLabs   More...

Malware writers team up for virus testing

Distributed teams take malware to new levels   More...

Do you agree?

Advertisement

Job of the week

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Hiring now on ComputingCareers:

Related IT jobs

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Advertisement

Watch

13 May 2008

3.06 MBBloody students, goodbye to Dixons and hacking excuses More...

BusinessGreen.com podcast logo

13 May 2008

1.82 MBEco-Entrepreneur introduction More...

12 May 2008

2.4 MBMicrosoft's battles, data breach fines and website rip-offs More...

Poll

DATA ENCRYPTION

DATA ENCRYPTION

Should encryption be mandatory for all personal data held by companies and governments?

Previous poll results

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Spotlight

BlackBerry Bold

RIM unveils slimmed-down BlackBerry Bold

New handset due this summer   More...

BlackBerry Bold

BlackBerry Bold takes on 3G iPhone

New models go head-to-head, says analyst   More...

Advertisement

HP

HP 'in talks' to buy EDS

Company offering upwards of $12bn   More...

Virgin Media

Virgin prepares 50Mbps launch in 2008

Successful trial clears network for higher speeds   More...

Advertisement