unix and linux commands - unix shell scripting

Fighting Against Phishing Scams

 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
# 1  
Old 01-22-2009
Fighting Against Phishing Scams

In last few days I noticed a huge spike in the number of phishing e-mails in my inbox. Most of them came disguised as e-mails from Microsoft Live support team regarding a possible account closure or reactivation. I have seen similar kind of phishing scams in past but this time the number of such e-mails were very huge. In a single day I got more than 100 such e-mails. None of them went to my junk folder but directly came to my inbox though I have good phishing/spam filters in place. I even received 2-3 follow-up e-mails from few e-mail accounts. I normally ignore spam/phishing e-mails and some time report if it is a major phishing attack. But this time I was curious to know from where all these e-mails came.

Interesting but not surprising-all those e-mails came from different ids (might  be spoofed ones) but through a single spam friendly Relay server. I am skipping the details of e-mail header analysis as it is out of the scope here.

I believe we are going to see more phishing scams in the coming days. What is the best way to protect from these type of attacks?

Simply ignore them and hope that these will stop someday when these people realize that it is not profitable anymore Or report every single phishing scams and try to block its source?

Image
Image

More...
Login or Register to Ask a Question

Previous Thread | Next Thread

2 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. What is on Your Mind?

Fighting useless use of cat

Fighting UUOC cat filename|while read line; do ... with sed 's/cat *\(*\) *|/<\1/g' I found that while loops are converted to <filename while read line; do ... Syntax error! Why syntax error? It would perfectly make sense. Further, read the article how-would-you-like-your-loops-served-today... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: MadeInGermany
5 Replies

2. Windows & DOS: Issues & Discussions

Stanford security experts unveil defenses against ‘phishing’ attacks

It's an online con that is growing fast and stealing tens of millions of dollars. An e-mail seemingly from a financial institution instructs you to log on to a legitimate-looking Web site. Such “phishing” attacks exploit a universal weakness in online security: passwords. To read the rest of... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: ZOverLord
0 Replies
Login or Register to Ask a Question