Spamvertised Intuit themed emails lead to Black Hole exploit kit

Spamvertised Intuit themed emails lead to Black Hole exploit kit

Cybercriminals are currently spamvertising millions of emails impersonating Intuit, in an attempt to trick end and corporate users into clicking on the malicious links found in the emails.

The emails pretend to be coming from Intuit’s PaymentNetwork and acknowledge the arrival of an incoming payment. In reality though, they redirect users to a Black Hole exploit kit landing URLs where client-side exploits are served, and ultimately malware is dropped on the infected hosts.

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Russian Ask.fm spamming tool spotted in the wild

Russian Ask.fm spamming tool spotted in the wild

On their way to occupy an even bigger market share, spammers constantly look for new ways to increase visitor conversion, and target as many users as possible with the least amount of time and money invested.

For years, their tactics included the development of cybercrime friendly online communities, sophisticated harvesting and validation of emails and user names across popular Web services, abusing the Domain Keys Identified Mail (DKIM) trust established between the most popular providers of free Web based email, development of DIY image spam generating platformsconversion of malware-infected hosts into spam spewing zombies, and most importantly, efficient ways to bypass anti-spam filters put in place by the security industry.

In this post, I’ll profile a recently advertised Ask.fm spamming tool, capable of spamming thousands of users through the use of proxies, which are in fact malware-infected hosts converted to anonymization proxies.

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Webroot Bulletin Regarding AV-Comparatives Results

Webroot Bulletin Regarding AV-Comparatives Results

If there is one thing that can be observed about the AV industry, it is that no solution is ever 100% effective at blocking malware. With this in mind, Webroot SecureAnywhere (WSA) was designed to protect users even in cases where undetected malicious software has made it onto the system.

AV-Comparatives recently published results for June’s “Real World” Protection Test. This test aims to replicate a real world experience for how malware would infect a PC. The scores indicate how many threats were detected vs. missed.

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Cybercriminals impersonate UPS in client-side exploits and malware serving spam campaign

Cybercriminals impersonate UPS in client-side exploits and malware serving spam campaign

In an attempt to aggregate as much traffic as possible, cybercriminals systematically abuse popular brands and online services. Next to periodically rotating the brands, they also produce professional looking email templates, in an attempt to successfully brand-jack these companies, and trick their customers into interacting with the malicious emails.

Today’s highlight is on a currently spamvertised client-side exploits and malware serving campaign impersonating UPS (United Parcel Service). Once users click on the links found in the malicious email, they’re automatically redirected to a Black Hole exploit kit landing page serving client-side exploits, and ultimately dropping malware on the exploited hosts.

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New Russian service sells access to compromised social networking accounts

New Russian service sells access to compromised social networking accounts

On daily basis, hundreds of thousands of legitimate accounts across multiple social networks get compromised, to be later on abused as a platform for launching related cyber attacks and social engineering attempts.

Recently, I came across a new Russian service offering access to compromised accounts across multiple social networks such as Vkontakte, Twitter, Facebook, LiveJournal, and last but not least, compromised email accounts. What’s particularly interesting about this service is the fact that it’s exclusively targeting Russian and Ukrainian users.

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Online dating scam campaign currently circulating in the wild

Online dating scam campaign currently circulating in the wild

Lonely birds, beware!

Russian online dating scammers are currently spamvertising a fraudulent campaign attempting to socially engineer users into interacting with a bogus online dating service.

What’s so special about this scam? Just how vibrant is the Russian online dating fraud market segment? How can you avoid falling victim into their fraudulent schemes?

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Spamvertised American Airlines themed emails lead to Black Hole exploit kit

Spamvertised American Airlines themed emails lead to Black Hole exploit kit

American Airlines customers, watch where you click! Cybercriminals are currently spamvertising millions of emails impersonating the company in an attempt to trick end and corporate users into clicking on the malicious links found in the spamvertised email.

Upon execution, the campaign redirects users to a Black Hole exploit kit landing URL, where client-side exploits are served against outdated third-party software and browser plugins.

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What’s the underground market’s going rate for a thousand U.S based malware infected hosts?

What’s the underground market’s going rate for a thousand U.S based malware infected hosts?

Imagine you’re a cybercriminal that has somehow managed to infect a 1000 U.S based hosts and is looking for ways to monetize his malicious activity? He could easily start spreading spam or phishing emails, use the infected hosts as a platform for disseminating related malware attacks, or basically data mine the infected hosts for accounting data to be later on sold to fellow cybercriminals.

What if all he wanted to do is earn as much profit in the shortest possible amount of time without investing more efforts into the monetization of the infected hosts? Is the cybercrime ecosystem mature enough to offer him an alternative? Appreciate the rhetoric. The maturing cybercrime ecosystem is fully capable of offering him a high liquidity monetization approach for earning revenue by infecting hosts and spreading a specific undetectable executable pushed by the pay-per-install affiliate network that I’ll profile in this post.

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