Vane3alga

Business
Focused
Technology

Researchers at Malwarebytes warn that a phishing campaign is informing users that someone logged into their account from an IP address in Moscow. The email contains a button to report the issue, which “opens a fresh email with a pre-filled message to be sent to a specific email account.” If a user sends this email, the attacker will reply and attempt to rope them further into the scam.

The researchers note that while the timing may be coincidental, users will probably be more inclined to respond to the emails given the current situation with Russia and Ukraine.

iStock 1350370834

“We have to be very clear here that anybody could have put this mail together, and may well not have anything to do with Russia directly,” the researchers write. “This is the kind of thing anyone anywhere can piece together in ten minutes flat, and mails of this nature have been bouncing around for years. But, given current world events, seeing ‘unusual sign-in activity from Russia’ is going to make most people do a double, and it’s perfect spam bait material for that very reason.”

Malwarebytes explains that this is a common but effective technique used in phishing attacks.

“Trying to panic people into hitting a button or click a link is an ancient social engineering tactic, but it sticks around because it works,” the researchers write. “We’ve likely all received a ‘bank details invalid,’ or ‘mysterious payment rejected’ message at one point or another. Depending on personal circumstance and/or what’s happening in the world at any given moment, one person’s ‘big deal’ is another one’s ‘oh no, my stuff,’” the researchers write. “That’s all it may take for some folks to lose their login, and this mail is perhaps more salient than most for the time being.”

Note how topical scams can be. Criminals and spymasters watch the news and cut their phishbait to fit current events. New-school security awareness training can give your employees a healthy sense of suspicion so they can avoid falling for social engineering attacks.


Source: KnowBe4

Success Stories

Principal Owner, Law Firm

Our law firm uses IT360, Inc. for all of our technology needs. They not only provide outstanding service at a reasonable fee, but we consider them an integral part of our practice.

Principal Owner, Law Firm

Recent
Technology News

IT 360 News - Why ‘Working Fine’ Is Silently Holding Your Business Back
Why ‘Working Fine’ Is Silently Holding Your Business Back

Most IT environments don’t fail dramatically. They linger. For many organizations, systems are “working fine” — emails go through, files are accessible, users can log in — so problems don’t feel urgent. But beneath the surface, that fine often comes with hidden costs: slower response times, manual workarounds, duplicated effort, security gaps, and growing dependence […]

Read more
IT 360 News - Your Team is Wasting 10+ Hours a Week–Here’s Where
Your Team is Wasting 10+ Hours a Week–Here’s Where

Most teams aren’t struggling because they lack effort — they’re struggling because of friction.In many businesses, employees are losing more than 10 hours each week to inefficiencies that feel normal but quietly add up. It’s not one big problem. It’s the small, repeated moments throughout the day — re-entering information, searching for files, switching between […]

Read more