Ads by TechWords

See your link here
Receive the latest technology news and information.
Computerworld Daily News (First Look and Wrap-Up)
Computerworld Blogs Newsletter
The Weekly Top 10
Cloud Computing
View all newsletters




Privacy Policy
 

Michael Jackson's death spawns malware, more scams

No surprise, but hackers use pop star's demise to dupe users

June 29, 2009 03:54 PM ET

Computerworld - As security researchers expected, hackers have begun to use the death of pop star Michael Jackson to infect people's PCs.

Starting late last week and continuing today, messages posing as breaking news alerts from the likes of CNN and the Los Angeles Times have been reaching users' mailboxes, said several security companies, including Sophos, Symantec and Trend Micro.

Some of the messages, which have appeared only in Spanish and Portuguese so far, include links claiming to lead to video of Jackson in an ambulance, or even of his body postmortem. The links, of course, take users to nothing of the kind. Instead, they force a pop-up message that instructs the user to update their copy of Adobe's Flash.

The Flash update ploy may be a now-standard hacker tactic, but it's worked extremely well in the past. Last summer, for example, fake CNN.com news notifications led massive numbers of users to thousands of hacked Web sites that served up fake Flash software.

According to Trend Micro's analysis, the phony news e-mails try to trick users into downloading a bot Trojan that hijacks PCs, then awaits instructions from the botnet's controller.

"Quite notable is that even if a user chooses the Cancel button, which should allow him/her to quit from downloading the file, the site will continue to push the download of the codec, leaving users with no choice but to deal with the malicious file downloaded into their system," Trend's Argie Gallego, one of the company's anti-spam research engineers, said in a blog post today.

Also new today, said Sophos, is a malware-free scam that tries to get people to send money to the bogus "Michael Jackson Organization." In an e-mail that calls Jackson "a true humanitarian," scammers beg people to "send your donations to us via money gram/western union."

Last week, Sophos' senior technology consultant Graham Cluley predicted that malware attacks would soon begin to make use of Jackson's demise. He was spot on. "I wouldn't be surprised to see hackers claiming that they have top-secret footage from the hospital, perhaps [allegedly] taken by the ambulance people, that then asks you to install a video codec," said Cluley last week.

Symantec has added more scams to an expect-soon list, including spam that leads users to fake antivirus software, Twitter tweets that include links to malicious sites and Facebook messages that dupe users into downloading Koobface, a worm that has appeared, disappeared and reappeared on that social networking site and others.

Things will get worse before they get better, argued Sophos in a post to its security labs' blog on Friday. "We have not seen many samples of this malware spam, and distribution seems limited so far," said Sophos. "It is likely that more Michael Jackson-themed malware and spam is on its way."



Jump to comments

Michael Jackson

Additional Resources

WHITE PAPER
Approximately 60 percent of data migration projects overrun time or budget, while some fail completely. Download this white paper, "Enhancing Your Chance for Successful Data Migration," to learn the critical steps you need to take to execute a data migration project with minimum cost and risk to your business.
WHITE PAPER
Read the Gartner research note to learn why the TCO of a server-based computing deployment used to deliver all applications to users is around 50% lower than that of an unmanaged desktop deployment.
WHITE PAPER
Economic downturns have a tendency to accelerate emerging technologies, boost the adoption of effective solutions, and punish solutions that are not cost competitive or that are out of synch with industry trends. This IDC White Paper presents the results of an IDC survey of 330 companies in Western Europe, Asia/Pacific and the Americas that measures the receptiveness to Linux and takes into consideration changing views driven by the disruptive economic environment that businesses face today.

What People Are Saying