Online games see increased phishing attacks

27 June 2011

Kaspersky Lab has released a report on spam activity for May 2011. Compared with the previous month, the volume of spam in e-mail traffic increased by 2.1%, making up on average 82.9% of the total. A lowering of phishing messages was also noted, while the share of postings containing malware increased.

Online games becoming more attractive to phishers

The most marked changes took place in the ratings of web services attacked the most with the use of phishing e-mails. 4.67% of all phishing e-mails were intended to steal passwords for the popular free online game RuneScape. As a result, this platform made its debut in the top ten straight in at No. 3 – way ahead of World of WarCraft – the most popular online game in the world.

RuneScape is of interest to cybercriminals more than even user details of the popular social networking site Facebook. The overall leader in the rating remained the payment system PayPal, which saw a small rise in the number of phishing emails (23.28 percentage points up on the figure for April 2011).

Terrorism as a cover for cybercrime

In May, spammers actively used current hot topics in the news to deceive users. In particular, a surge in the number of messages was detected exploiting the news of the death of Osama bin Laden. Such messages contained malicious files as well as links to legitimate payware.

News of the death of the world’s No. 1 terrorist was even used in the e-mails of the so-called Nigerian scammers. The trick they used to attempt to extract funds generally stayed the same – the scammers request payment of a small sum with the promise of being returned a much bigger sum in the future.

Worthy to note is the fact that instead of traditional requests for “help”, in a new type of e-mail users are threatened with their accounts being frozen on the pretext of suspicions that somehow they are connected with terrorists.

Malware in spam: personal data theft and fake anti-virus programs

Russia has become the world leader in terms of the quantity of malware found in e-mails detected by antivirus programs. The USA, formerly taking first place, now comes second – the quantity of infected emails sent to American users fell by 3.5 percentage points.

The most widespread malware distributed via e-mail was the Trojan-Spy program Trojan-Spy.HTML.Fraud.gen. Worms like Email-Worm.Win32.Mydoom.m, Email-Worm.Win32.Bagle.gt and Email-Worm.Win32.NetSky.q all remained high in the ratings, while newcomers included two Trojan-Downloader.Win32.FraudLoad Trojans. This type of program installs fake antivirus programs on PCs.

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