Help | Contact | Forum | Affiliates | Press Purchase Download Features Screenshots Demo

Phishing attacks get personal

You know to watch for phishing attacks, which use e-mail messages purporting to be from legitimate businesses to trick you into divulging private information. You're cautious and use a good spam filter, but phishing messages still get through. And these messages are more dangerous than ever.

According to Cisco, almost 200 billion spam messages are sent daily. They have one thing in common: They want your money.

Most computer users can spot phishing messages. Unfortunately, cybercriminals have become more sophisticated, too. Targeted phishing attacks account for 0.4% of spam. That may seem minor, but it's 800 million messages a day.

For example, you receive a message purportedly from your Internet service provider. It greets you by name and says your billing information is outdated. It says you must click a link to update your information. If you comply, your information will be stolen. This is the type of targeted attack you will see more of in 2009.

Read Original Story



News 1 year ago



Related Stories:

FCC must make ISPs crack down on spammers and malware

China requires ID to buy mobile phone numbers

Huge Spamming Botnet Injured but Still Alive

25% Of Malware Spread Via USB Drives

Rustock Botnet Changes Tactics

92% of e-mail is spam - 41% from single source

Scammers hit Twitter, Facebook, send free iPad spam

'LOL is this you?' spam spreading via Facebook chat

Google Fixes Gmail Bug That Turned Email into Spam

Symantec Warns of New Trojan Spam Campaign