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Phishers now talk with forked tongues
Information Technology News
Phishers now talk with forked tongues | Phishers now talk with forked tongues |
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| Written by Stan Beer | |
| Thursday, 27 April 2006 | |
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According to RSA, over 10,000 phishing attacks hosted in 70 different countries have been detected, giving a worrying indication of developing trends. Fraud specialists have noticed an increase in the number of attacks against European countries – including Spain, Germany and Italy, as well as the Netherlands, Scandinavia and France. Emails are even sent in local dialects, such as Catalan in Northern Spain, with the fraudulent websites designed to effortlessly bypass local protection mechanisms such as back-of-ATM-card matrix of random numbers, scratch cards with random access codes, or lists of one time transaction access numbers held by the bank’s customers. A combination of the increase in the number of online banking users in Europe and Asia Pacific, banks offering increased functionality as part of online services, and the sophistication and resources available to fraudsters are all believed to be contributing to this trend. Also, as larger institutions implement stronger defenses, fraud continues to migrate – phishers have already moved downstream to smaller financial institutions in the U.S., and are now moving across borders and expanding their global reach. RSA Security’s fraud analysts have also detected postings in online fraudster communities suggesting that local crime rings that are familiar with the way local banks work in the various countries are requesting phishing attacks on European targets. In other words, there is a surge in demand for European banks’ phished credentials. Researchers at RSA have also conducted analysis into the source of phishing attacks in some of the most frequently targeted countries. Their research shows that the origin of phishing attacks often varies considerably, and includes a wide range of host countries. For example in the UK, less than half of phishing attacks originate in the US, with 20% coming from Korea, 7% from Germany, 4% from the UK and 3% from Thailand, India, Morocco, Sweden, France, Israel and China. In Spain, 37% of phishing attacks are instigated in the US, 20% in Germany, 7% in Korea, 5% in Japan, 4% in Australia and 3% in France and China. Other European countries hosting attacks targeting Spain make up 15% and other Asia Pacific countries constitute 6%. This demonstrates the international, networked nature of the online fraud industry, and indicates the breadth of the expertise available to fraudsters. The primary phishing targets worldwide continue to be English-speaking countries such as the US and the UK, followed by Australia, South Africa and Canada. The US, for example, sees over 50% of worldwide attacks.{moscomment}
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