Google Says Spam, Virus Attacks to Get More Clever 108
eweekhickins writes "Google's Postini team says new attacks will take the form of sneaky viruses that will blend with spam, leveraging specific current events, such as the Super Bowl or the Summer Olympic Games. Better yet, virus attacks will target executives at companies whose intellectual property is deemed valuable on the black market.
A lot of these attacks will masquerade as legitimate business agencies, such as the Internal Revenue Service, the Better Business Bureau and the SEC."
And you know (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:And you know (Score:5, Insightful)
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ten thousand?
Radiometric dating shows there are at least 4.54 billion people connected to the internet.
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phishing attacks against irs.gov (Score:4, Interesting)
One was an ordinary phishing attack.
The other gave a URL in a valid subdomain of irs.gov
So either
- the attack was broken (certainly possible)
- the attack was relying on DNS cache poisoning or compromised servers
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Thunderbird is pretty good about noticing those types of problems -- if the linked domain doesn't match it'll give a warning message.
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that these will be successful. So many suckers, so little time./quote.
Not with me. I us Linux and get my meds from my doctor (or local dealer, depending on the "med").
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that these will be successful. So many suckers, so little time.
(that looks better)
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j/k
Its kinda ironic (Score:3, Funny)
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-quietly takes notes on the techniques Google outlines...- mmm, SEC, eh? Excellent plan...
In other news (Score:1)
In other other news (Score:1)
SSDD (Score:4, Interesting)
The bastards!! I'd better warn my associates in South Africa.
Seriously, TFA comes off as a padded version of "uhm, so...they're probably going to keep finding new ways to do this...since that's what they already do". The report itself looks to hold a little more substance, but then, I guess it's hard to make news out of spam that doesn't involve a big shift in the court, because it's pretty boring by definition.
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You don't say? (Score:5, Funny)
What happened to "Bayesian Filters"... (Score:4, Interesting)
What happened?
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In conclusion: whenever you hear the word "totally solve" being associated with anything involving uncertain/probabilistic rea
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Crims get more entrepreneurial (Score:5, Informative)
Crims have always been good at adapting and exploiting conditions. The Mafia really got their power due to exploiting the prohibition. Cable thieves in South Africa are using rolling blackout schedules to plan their cable thefts.
As more business services are done online it makes sense to phish for more than some lame paypal accounts.
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/. emails. (Score:3, Funny)
Ric Romero working for Google? (Score:2)
IT systems are increasingly complex, security is still an after-thought on products (instead of a core design consideration), and there's also the simple economies of scale; what was tens of thousands of targets, became millions of targets, and is now probably billions. A simple crack that works on 0.001% of the systems will still be cost-effective for whatever the net result is, most likely.
And?
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To my pedantic mind, these are poor examples. Water is not wet, instead objects immersed in water become wet. And as for rocks being hard, it depends on the rock. Talc for example is a very soft rock, scratchable by glass, a knife or even a fingernail. See Moh's work [wikipedia.org] (he figured all this out a while ago.)
Google? Don't you just mean Postini? (Score:4, Informative)
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Plus, I imagine a year is an eternity at Google.
Well, which is it? (Score:5, Funny)
A lot of these attacks will masquerade as legitimate business agencies, such as the Internal Revenue Service, the Better Business Bureau and the SEC.
Will these attacks masquerade as legitimate business agencies, or as agencies such the Internal Revenue Service, the Better Business Bureau, and the SEC?
ASCII art (Score:5, Interesting)
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http://www.jasons-toolbox.com/images/ASCIISpam.jpg [jasons-toolbox.com]
Obviously that mess of characters between "www" and "com" was their URL which I've munged so as not to give them any traffic.
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It's quite doable, but the question is if it can determine if the text is indeed ascii art.
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I wonder why? (Score:1)
Wait, isn't this already the case? (Score:3, Informative)
How? (Score:2)
Re:How? (Score:4, Funny)
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YAWN (Score:4, Insightful)
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This is a sales pitch, there's nothing new in that article. Google is just fishing for more business for postini...
You mean TFA is just a sophisticated form of spam :-)
Rich.
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Human Intelligence (Score:3)
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Targeting executives (Score:2, Interesting)
SMTP = evil (Score:2)
The sheer amount of bounced spam that I get makes me want to surrender my email account and move to a mountaintop in Nepal and herd goats.
In other news.... (Score:2)
(translation for sarcasm impaired - "duuh!!")
-Em
Slashdot article links to hostile code (Score:2)
Nice demo. The link for this article leads to an ad page which won't close if you have AdBlock installed.
Like a firehose.... (Score:3, Informative)
Here's a simple example: most Gmail users know they have a Spam folder, into which Gmail transfers any messages which appear "spammy." This works pretty well, and I keep around 30 days worth in there, as I used to occasionally look through for false positives (which happened sometimes.)
The problem now is just that there is too much spam to do this. Let's compare: here is the count of spam in ONE Gmail account, for the past 30 days -- can anyone match it?
Spam (84194)
I figure that's a rate of 2,800 per day, or 116 per hour. Nearly two spam messages, every minute, 24x7.... and most of it consists of duplicates. Why are the spammers doing this? Unless they are paid per message they send, I don't see it improving their chances of getting a message past filters.
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It's likely that you are on the spammers list more than once, though a smarter spammer would check for that sort of thing, so quite possibly you are in a number of different lists that the same spammer is using.
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I figure that's a rate of 2,800 per day, or 116 per hour. Nearly two spam messages, every minute, 24x7.... and most of it consists of duplicates. Why are the spammers doing this? Unless they are paid per message they send, I don't see it improving their chances of getting a message past filters.
The spam is being sent by a botnet of indeterminate size, and not always in direct communication back to their "masters". Sending emails, even duplicates, costs nothing and is better than having to know the siz
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Stop using the phrase "intellectual property" (Score:1)
Time for PGP/SMIME to go mainstream? (Score:4, Interesting)
This would help against spam similar to how anti-phishing technologies in IE and Firefox protect against bad websites, but its still not perfect.
S/MIME and PGP are strong technologies to help against fraud. I just wish more companies would send out mail with it. For example, one could register a PGP public key with a shop, and when the shop would send E-mail, it would send it signed, and encrypted to that key. Even just using S/MIME's signing capability which works with virtually any E-mail client [1] would help matters greatly.
[1]: Even pine and mutt support S/MIME. A lot of cellphones support this functionality as well, such as all recent Windows Mobile devices and Blackberries.
Good idea, however... (Score:5, Insightful)
However, I can see a few issues that would impact the rate of adoption and the overall utility of your approach (assuming, for the sake of simplicity, that the cryptographic aspects are implemented in a truly secure manner, the crypto itself is strong, etc. I fully realize that this is like the proveribial "frictionless surface" and the proverbial "ideal conductor" used in science books. I'm just trying to cover the big points here, OK?):
1. It will not happen until Verisign (for example) decide that there is enough of a market that they can make a decent profit.
2. It will either price small businesses out of the market (given Verisign's prices, this is likely) or it the price will be such that small businesses can afford it and then so can the spammers. Before you start claiming that is why there is a vetting process, I would suggest that hurdles low enough for small "mom-and-pop" businesses to jump will be low enough for a determined spammer.
3. Either we need a "Root CA" mechanism like other certificates (again, profit and "are you sure you can trust this") or the whole "web of trust" thing from PGP. The web of trust would be difficult in that it would make legit messages appear fake until you can determine it. Also, how would "Joe Sixpack" know the difference between a legit cert for the IRS and a faked one?
Your idea is good. Unfortunately, the current environment is not ready for it. I hope we will see the day when it will work.
will?? (Score:2)
nothing to see here, please move on.
Great (Score:2)
Perhaps then something might get done.
Good... (Score:2)
Hopefully the spammers will develop better bots which target only those.
also on emule (Score:1)
Is this really more clever? (Score:1)
"According to this email, I can buy Viagra and support the Obama campaign!"
Won't matter to Google (Score:1)
My first thought... (Score:2)
Like the numbers stations (Score:4, Interesting)
News @ 10 (Score:1)
Say What? (Score:1)
I think the only correct response is, Huh?
Already Happening (Score:2)
Evolutionists, beware! (Score:2, Funny)
Ruh Roh!! (Score:1)
Fresh from the Irony Desk... (Score:2)
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That would be more better.
Err
New Attacks? (Score:1)
This is an old trick used by the spammers. The same thing happened last year with the Super Bowl, the same with the IRS phishing e-mails (some of them e-mailed late after the filing season, some even before the filing season).
You're telling me Google (Postini?) took more than a year to discover this, some of these social engineering attacks (especially the malware e-mails focussed on special events) have been around since 2006 as far as I can recall (refer to the links below).
Special Event Malware Spam [cybertopcops.com]
SPAM (Score:1)
But I need to block 12000mails a day on spam
That is a rate of more then 98% a day of spam
when will thay learn that i just drop those mails
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Who really produces the spam? Not as claimed 2 B (Score:1)
So who would benefit from the effects of Spam?
Those wanting to reduce our performance as a nation.
Those wanting to occupy or divert the attention of the people from real issues.
Those wanting to create a reason to regulate and control the Internet.
Those who sell anit-spam anti-virus software
Those wanting to disrupt (clog up) the free flow of valuable information on the Internet.
Any
Also Just in from Google: (Score:1)
By the Power of Grayskull NO..... (Score:4, Funny)
They found the biggest security weakness of every single company... The Pointy Haired Ones.
Oh wow (Score:2)
A lot of these attacks will masquerade as legitimate business agencies, such as the Internal Revenue Service, the Better Business Bureau and the SEC
Yes, and nobody is going to guess what is happening despite the fact that you and everyone you know suddenly receives at least 10 emails from the 'Inland Revenue' a day. You'd have to be really, seriously stupid to fall for that - it seems ironic that anybody would want to steal intellectual property from people that retarded. Aren't you supposed to at least have an intellect in order to acquire intellectual property?
Not the viruses... (Score:2)
It's not as trivial a distinction as it seems. The article's comments are obvious when you look at it that way -- it's already well-known that organized crime and other crooks-who-know-what-they're-doing are getting involved. We've seen increasing numbers of very well-written, highly targeted attacks. It's not just Nigerian business deals any more.
This distinction goes to the core of how you fight spam and assort