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Fear, greed, lust: Phishing's sure-fire lures

Fear, greed, lust: Phishing's sure-fire lures

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 25 Jun 2007 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

A report from McAfee outlines the persuasive "mind games" cyber criminals play to get users clicking their way into an IT security breach. Experts discuss the right way to train your staff

And while Hebert said users are not falling for e-mail spam as often as they used to, phishing sites which emulate corporate Web sites are often successful in tricking them.

“The first [phishing sites] we saw a few years ago were full of typos and bad art,” Hebert said. “But nowadays you see a complete mimic of corporate identities and the language it utilizes is often flawless.” Even more advanced, according to Sehti, is cross-site scripting techniques, which exploit holes in Web applications. This means that a user can see a link that appears to be from a legitimate Web site, however, because of a code vunerbility in the site, users can be exposed to a phishing attack if they follow the link.

For example, if this was done at an online bank, users could have their username, password, and account information logged without suspicion. “This is the kind of area that is lacking in general user awareness training, so a lot of times people even general security people don’t know about cross-site scripting,” Sethi said.

Until better tools exist to defend against this type of attack, security experts say users should be cautious of long URLs because of they may include a harmful script tag. This is something that could go unnoticed by even the most computer-savvy users.

“If you want to click on the link, copy and paste the link into your web browser and look at it,” Sehti said. “This may be verging on paranoia, but to be really sure you may want to try to go to the main site in question and get to the particular desired area manually.”










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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

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