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  • Hackers are using phishing emails from PayPal


    IMTHEGRAY

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    • 4 comments
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    • 3 minutes

    Avanan researchers have found a new way that hackers are taking to get into the inbox: creating fake invoices in PayPal and using the legitimacy of the site to get into the inbox. 
    Starting in June 2022, Avanan researchers have seen hackers use PayPal to send malicious invoices and request payments. The hackers send the email from PayPal's domain, using a free PayPal account that they have signed up for, with the email body spoofing brands like Norton. Avanan analyzed how hackers are leveraging legitimate and popular websites to get into inboxes and steal credentials and money. 


    According to Avanan, hackers are using a combination of social engineering and legitimate domains to extract money and credentials from end users, which can be done on any site trusted and used regularly by end-users. "PayPal and QuickBooks are particularly clever since they are often used for business invoices. The scam works since static Allow Lists "allow" content from these sites directly from the inbox. It's a way of condensing the internet for security scanners. You can't block the whole internet; so you try to figure out what you know is good. Trusted websites like PayPal often make the cut, even if it is an oft impersonated brand. What makes this attack scary is that the phishing invoices are created and sent through PayPal. That makes it more legitimate to the security service and to the end-user," Avanan says.
    Avanan notified PayPal of this attack on July 19th.


    The attack is a reminder of the genius and persistence of threat actors. They continue to build new tactics on existing ones to profit from security loopholes, says Mark Arnold, Vice President, Advisory Services at LARES Consulting. "The ingenuity of attackers reinforces the need for continuous security awareness programs that can arm end users with the knowledge to thwart existing and emerging threats like this one. The list of techniques to conduct credential harvesting will undoubtedly grow. Brand impersonation in combination with Double Spear is the latest entry. Security awareness stewards need to be creative enough and tap into relevant intelligence sources to keep training current in the face of these and similar attacks," Arnold says.


    Patrick Harr, CEO at SlashNext, suggests social engineering scams need to be included in phishing training programs. "Training should include social engineering scams to demonstrate how personal interactions, such as social media interactions, can impact their work-life. However, we hear from users that making policy adjustments restricting employees' use of mobile, social, or other personal apps is not well received," Harr explains. "In fact, asking employees to install managed security on their personal devices is also a non-starter. Look for security solutions that protect BYOD users from phishing with complete privacy and the added benefit of protecting the organization."

     

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    Yes. I got one of those. Very legit looking. I wonder if I would have seen the difference because of that:

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    The hackers send the email from PayPal's domain

    It's all for nought though because I know what's going on with my finances. So I simply flushed it.

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    i got one today too, trashed it.

    seems like i am getting a lot more spam these days..

    casinos and "hot women" looking for action. lol

    cheers

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    On 7/24/2022 at 9:49 PM, leapinlizards said:

    "hot women" looking for action. lol

    I've seen a pronounced uptick of these over the last few months. Mostly claiming to be Ukrainian women or related dating; obviously spammers taking advantage of russia's war. No PP related ones recently though; certainly not ones that are not obviously bogus.

     

    Over the same timeframe there have been a lot of more targetted ones with names of several online shops I use along with my real name, usually offering some prize or discount code if I click the link. If there were other shop names that I didn't use in there, I might think it was just random but there aren't, so someone's sold/lost real information. These are mostly sent to several email addresses I've used for things like moneybookers and other online insurance comparison sites etc... read on...

     

    I use a catch-all email account, and create a unique address for each shop etc. that I use. Any that come from those addresses but not from the shop get reported to the shop's CS; there have been a good number over the years (as in high double figures) - perhaps 30% of all the addresses. None of the shops mentioned in this current crop use those shops' actual addresses though; just the ones mentioned above that I fully expect to be sold to spammers anyway. I've only ever had one reply when reporting this issue to a business; that was outright denial of any knowledge of it.

     

    The worst I've had was from my own ISP. They had a unique email address for me, and in fact it had never even been used because they always communicated on the ISP account's included address, not the personal one they had for me. Then I started to get spam, lots of it, to that unique and never used address. My ISP denied any knowledge, even to the point of getting aggressive over it. Then a few more people appeared with exactly the same complaint as me, who did the same email trick. All of us had had the same thing happen, and we hit the forum with it. Eventually, after more denial and wriggling, the ISP admitted there had been a data breach in India where some of the services were outsourced. They still outright refused to admit that they had any responsibility for the compromised email addresses, but it was blatantly obvious they had come from that breach. As far as I know they never reported the breach as legally required either. I just had to drop the issue because it was like banging my head against the wall, the damage was already done and the chances of any outcome of use to us was non-existent. Even if they got fined for not reporting it, it wouldn't help us.

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