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New
Virus disguised as Social Security
Administration download
Newswise — A new spam campaign using false
e-mails made to look like messages from the
Social Security Administration is capable of
stealing Social Security numbers and
downloading malware onto victims’ home
computers, says Gary Warner, director of
computer forensics at the University of
Alabama at Birmingham (UAB).
The campaign was discovered Nov. 23 by
Warner and his team in the UAB Spam Data
Mine.
“In this continued difficult economy, these
cyber criminals are now preying on victims’
concerns over money, promising Social
Security payouts and tax breaks to victims
that sign in to the criminals’ fake Social
Security Web pages,” Warner says.
The spam messages tell users that there are
errors with their Social Security statement
then asks them to link to false pages made
to look like the Social Security
Administration Web site. Warner says the
false pages ask users to enter their Social
Security numbers before prompting them to
download their fake statement.
“The reality is that the download is
actually a virus capable of stealing
personal information, including bank
passwords, from home computers,” Warner
says. “So once you have completed the login
and download, the cyber criminals not only
have your Social Security number, they also
have infected your computer with serious
malware that enables them to steal
information and raid your bank and other
accounts.”
Warner says the UAB Spam Data Mine uncovered
the new Social Security scam during its
daily routine searchers for the top spam
campaigns, which are conducted every 15
minutes due to the high volume of spam
arriving in the data mine’s inboxes each
day.
“This morning (Nov. 23) over the course of
just two search periods, or just one half
hour, we went from zero instances of the
Social Security spam to uncovering some 600
samples of the spam,” Warner said. “So we
have not only uncovered a very new campaign,
but a quick-spreading one as well.”
Warner reminds computer users that no
legitimate company or agency would ever ask
users to update or review records via
e-mail, but instead would request they do so
only through that company’s own Web site.
E-mails requesting account updates should
not be considered legitimate, Warner says.
Learn more about the Social Security spam
campaign and how the UAB Spam Data Mine was
able to uncover it by clicking here to link
to Warner’s blog Cyber Crime and Doing Time.
About UAB
UAB Computer Forensics Research is on the
front lines of cyber crime and takes a
three-part approach in its response to the
problem: academic training to prepare the
next generation cyber-crime investigators,
increased public awareness of cyber crime
and research to develop cutting-edge options
for battling cyber criminals.
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