Report blames 'Avalanche' group for most phishing
IDG News Service - A new report blames a single Eastern European gang for about two-thirds of all phishing attempts conducted in the last half of 2009.
The phishing group -- named Avalanche by security researchers because of the large quantity of attacks it generates -- was blamed for more than 84,000 out of the nearly 127,000 phishing attacks tracked by the Anti-Phishing Working Group (APWG), an organization of companies and law enforcement agencies that tracks phishing activity in its semi-annual reports.
Avalanche has used slick automated tools to crank out phishing attacks quickly, setting up fake Web sites and then spamming potential victims with e-mail messages designed to trick them into typing in their usernames and passwords.
The group has targeted about 40 institutions, including major U.S. and U.K. banks as well as online providers such as Yahoo and Google, said Greg Aaron, director of domain security with Internet infrastructure vendor Afilias, one of the authors of the report. "They were able to ramp up and they became very, very large," he said.
Spurred by this activity, the overall number of phishing attacks more than doubled in the last half of 2009 over the first half of the year.
Avalanche first popped up in late 2008, not long after the previous top phishing threat, Rock Phish, dropped off the scene. In fact, some antiphishing experts believe that Avalanche is simply the next generation of phishing tools designed by Rock Phish's creators. Researchers believe that Avalanche, like Rock Phish, is run out of an Eastern European country.
By October of last year, Avalanche was such a big problem that security companies and the firms whose users were being phished got together in Seattle to share information on the group and work out ways of fighting the problem.
Companies began sharing data that had previously been kept private, and groups were formed to keep track of new Avalanche domains, said Gary Warner, director of research in computer forensics with the University of Alabama at Birmingham. "Whenever any brand or member saw a new domain, we went straight to the registrars and began pounding them from a bunch of different sources," he said in an instant-message interview.
That helped the good guys take down fake sites much faster than before. "In five years now of working anti-phishing research, this was the most coordinated community effort I've ever seen," Warner said.
The registries also were able to be more proactive. "And the different registries that were getting abused began learning how to recognize the domains on their own," he said.
In early 2008, the average takedown time for a phishing site was 49.5 hours, Aaron said. In the last half of 2009 that had been cut down to 31 hours, 38 minutes. Avalanche domains, however, went down twice as fast, on average, as other phishing domains.
Right now, it looks like the group's work on Avalanche may be paying off.
In November, several unnamed security companies got together and took down Avalanche's infrastructure for about a week, Aaron said.
That takedown put a big dent in the number of phishing attacks for November, and following a brief rebound, Avalanche attacks have tapered off precipitously in the past few months, Aaron said.
He doesn't know how long this quiet period will last, however. "We don't know if they're going to fade away or if they're going to change what they're doing somehow and ramp back up again."
- Google I/O 2013's Coolest Products and Services
- 10 Star Trek Technologies That are Almost Here
- 19 Generations of Computer Programmers
- 25 Must-Have Technologies for SMBs
- A walking tour: 33 questions to ask about your company's security
- 15 social media scams
- The 7 elements of a successful security awareness program
- IT Certification Study Tips
- Register for this Computerworld Insider Study Tip guide and gain access to hundreds of premium content articles, cheat sheets, product reviews and more.
- Inquiry Spotlight: Consumer-Facing Identity The challenges of consumer-facing identity management, access management, and authentication differ in ways subtle and dramatic from those of the employee-facing variety.
- IDC Security Infographic From the Era Before security to this current era of empowerment this infographic from Blue coat provides a timeline navigates the rise of...
- Key Drivers: Why CIOs Believe Empowered Users Set the Agenda for Enterprise Security Several years ago, a transformation in IT began to take place; a transformation from an IT-centric view of technology to a business-centric view...
- Security Empowers Business Every magazine article, presentation or blog about the topic seems to start the same way: trying to scare the living daylights out of...
- Live Webcast
Storage Validation at Go Daddy: Best Practices from the World's #1 Web Hosting Provider - Storage Validation at Go Daddy: Best Practices from the World's #1 Web Hosting Provider
- Live Webcast
MFT and FileXpress - An Overview - Business users and applications exchange files on a regular basis. File transfer is a core part of the flow of business activity.
- Live Webcast
Bridging HTTP and FTP with FileXpress Internet Server - What if you could take an FTP server on your internal network, and allow external users (partners or customers) to securely access it...
- Bridging HTTP and FTP with FileXpress Internet Server What if you could take an FTP server on your internal network, and allow external users (partners or customers) to securely access it...
- MFT and FileXpress - An Overview Business users and applications exchange files on a regular basis. File transfer is a core part of the flow of business activity. All Security White Papers | Webcasts