Posts Tagged ‘phishing’

A marathon of holiday spam

Thursday, May 17th, 2012
The main spam topics that emerged during the last quarter included the increase in spam during the holidays, mass mailings, malicious attachments and the distribution of phishing attacks, according to...

Rise of .in URLs in Spam

Monday, May 14th, 2012


Symantec has observed an increase in spam messages containing URLs using the country code top-level domain (ccTLD) for India. This chart shows percentage of spam containing .in URLs:

While there were few daily spikes last year, clearly there has been more activity in the last two months.

Looking back at last year, the ccTLD for India (.in) ranked tenth on our TLD distribution list:

Rank TLD % of URL Spam
1 .com 58.89%
2 .ru 9.16%
3 .info 8.57%
4 .net 6.10%
5 .org 3.39%
6 .br 2.56%
7 .ua 2.10%
8 dotted quad 0.69%
9 .uk 0.59%
10 .in 0.50%

However, the .in ccTLD jumps to the fifth spot when looking at the last month (while the percentage more than quadruples):

Rank TLD % of URL Spam
1 .com 68.47%
2 .ru 7.13%
3 .net 5.45%
4 .br 3.20%
5 .in 2.34%

Examining messages found in the Global Intelligence Network, Symantec researchers have found that the vast majority of spam messages containing .in URLs is hit & run spam. Back in March of this year Symantec noted an increase in hit & run spam and .in URLs appear to be associated with it.

Here are top ten subject lines from .in URL spam over the last five days:

Subject: Avoid Retail Markup
Subject: What Retailers Don't Want You to Know
Subject: Visitors Pass
Subject: Visitors Pass Alert<br />Subject: 4 foods that KILL fat and 7 food chemicals that CAUSE it
Subject: Visitors Pass Notification
Subject: Warning- You may not be protected by Norton. Update Now.
Subject: Health coverage with or without pre-existing conditions.
Subject: Special 2012 Savings - Eliminate entire phone bill
Subject: DirectBuy Visitors Pass Notification

Please note the use of the Norton brand above is unauthorized and that message is not from Symantec. Rather than providing antivirus software updates, as the message claims, these messages instead often deliver various malware to users.

Symantec will continue to monitor this trend and create additional filters to target these attacks. In addition, Symantec also advises enterprises and consumers to adopt the best practices found in the Symantec Intelligence Report.

Rise of .in URLs in Spam

Monday, May 14th, 2012



Symantec has observed an increase in spam messages containing URLs using the country code top-level domain (ccTLD) for India. This chart shows percentage of spam containing .in URLs:

While there were few daily spikes last year, clearly there has been more activity in the last two months.

Looking back at last year, the ccTLD for India (.in) ranked tenth on our TLD distribution list:

Rank TLD % of URL Spam
1 .com 58.89%
2 .ru 9.16%
3 .info 8.57%
4 .net 6.10%
5 .org 3.39%
6 .br 2.56%
7 .ua 2.10%
8 dotted quad 0.69%
9 .uk 0.59%
10 .in 0.50%

However, the .in ccTLD jumps to the fifth spot when looking at the last month (while the percentage more than quadruples):

Rank TLD % of URL Spam
1 .com 68.47%
2 .ru 7.13%
3 .net 5.45%
4 .br 3.20%
5 .in 2.34%

Examining messages found in the Global Intelligence Network, Symantec researchers have found that the vast majority of spam messages containing .in URLs is hit & run spam. Back in March of this year Symantec noted an increase in hit & run spam and .in URLs appear to be associated with it.

Here are top ten subject lines from .in URL spam over the last five days:

Subject: Avoid Retail Markup
Subject: What Retailers Don't Want You to Know
Subject: Visitors Pass
Subject: Visitors Pass Alert<br />Subject: 4 foods that KILL fat and 7 food chemicals that CAUSE it
Subject: Visitors Pass Notification
Subject: Warning- You may not be protected by Norton. Update Now.
Subject: Health coverage with or without pre-existing conditions.
Subject: Special 2012 Savings - Eliminate entire phone bill
Subject: DirectBuy Visitors Pass Notification

Please note the use of the Norton brand above is unauthorized and that message is not from Symantec. Rather than providing antivirus software updates, as the message claims, these messages instead often deliver various malware to users.

Symantec will continue to monitor this trend and create additional filters to target these attacks. In addition, Symantec also advises enterprises and consumers to adopt the best practices found in the Symantec Intelligence Report.

Rise of .in URLs in Spam

Monday, May 14th, 2012




Symantec has observed an increase in spam messages containing URLs using the country code top-level domain (ccTLD) for India. This chart shows percentage of spam containing .in URLs:

While there were few daily spikes last year, clearly there has been more activity in the last two months.

Looking back at last year, the ccTLD for India (.in) ranked tenth on our TLD distribution list:

Rank TLD % of URL Spam
1 .com 58.89%
2 .ru 9.16%
3 .info 8.57%
4 .net 6.10%
5 .org 3.39%
6 .br 2.56%
7 .ua 2.10%
8 dotted quad 0.69%
9 .uk 0.59%
10 .in 0.50%

However, the .in ccTLD jumps to the fifth spot when looking at the last month (while the percentage more than quadruples):

Rank TLD % of URL Spam
1 .com 68.47%
2 .ru 7.13%
3 .net 5.45%
4 .br 3.20%
5 .in 2.34%

Examining messages found in the Global Intelligence Network, Symantec researchers have found that the vast majority of spam messages containing .in URLs is hit & run spam. Back in March of this year Symantec noted an increase in hit & run spam and .in URLs appear to be associated with it.

Here are top ten subject lines from .in URL spam over the last five days:

Subject: Avoid Retail Markup
Subject: What Retailers Don't Want You to Know
Subject: Visitors Pass
Subject: Visitors Pass Alert<br />Subject: 4 foods that KILL fat and 7 food chemicals that CAUSE it
Subject: Visitors Pass Notification
Subject: Warning- You may not be protected by Norton. Update Now.
Subject: Health coverage with or without pre-existing conditions.
Subject: Special 2012 Savings - Eliminate entire phone bill
Subject: DirectBuy Visitors Pass Notification

Please note the use of the Norton brand above is unauthorized and that message is not from Symantec. Rather than providing antivirus software updates, as the message claims, these messages instead often deliver various malware to users.

Symantec will continue to monitor this trend and create additional filters to target these attacks. In addition, Symantec also advises enterprises and consumers to adopt the best practices found in the Symantec Intelligence Report.

Mobile Wallets—How I Make Mobile Payments Securely

Friday, May 11th, 2012


Some say there will be a day when the wallet you carry in your pocket or purse will become obsolete. The plan is to eliminate all our credit cards, store cards, and IDs and use our mobile phones as our primary means of commerce and identification. The technology behind mobile wallet or mobile POS (point Read more...

Are Tablets Just As Vulnerable As Mobile Phones?

Wednesday, May 9th, 2012



With unit sales of smartphones and tablets eclipsing those of desktop and notebook PCs, cybercriminals will continue setting their sights on mobile, and increased mobile Internet use will continue exacerbating security and data breach issues. McAfee Labs™ points out today’s tablets are more powerful than notebooks were just a few years ago. Although their lack Read more...

Phishing impersonating email service providers spikes

Wednesday, May 9th, 2012
Phishing attacks impersonating email service providers increased 333 percent from Q4 2011 to Q1 2012. IID attributes this spike to spammers needing unsullied email addresses since many major spamming ...

Cyber attackers target US natural gas pipeline companies

Tuesday, May 8th, 2012
Unknown attackers are actively targeting natural gas pipeline sector companies in the US with spear phishing emails, the US Department of Homeland Security's Industrial Control Systems Cyber Emergency...

US man confesses to part in $1.3M bank and payroll phishing scam

Tuesday, May 8th, 2012
A 31-year-old US man from Atlanta, Georgia, admitted last week that he and his gang stole more than $1.3 million USD by phishing confidential account information from e-commerce sites.