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The Definition of Phishing

Defining phishing is simple, right? Not exactly. With more than 18,400,000 results appearing on Google when trying to find the definition there is a lot for you to choose from. Even Wikipedia has its own version, which may be more accurate, but still misses a few key elements. As a company, PhishLabs has seen the scope of how phishing is changing since first being named, which is why it's time...
Blog

The Rise in Mobile Phishing Attacks

Each year new phishing techniques result in more attacks successfully landing in user inboxes. In most cases, threat actors are no different than anyone else, and follow the hottest trends in an effort to be more relevant. During tax season they may push out tax scams, during elections they may push bogus political-inspired healthcare emails, and there are even Game of Thrones inspired...
Blog

Beyond the Top 5 Industries Most Impacted by Social Engineering

In this year's annual Phishing Trends and Intelligence report we identified phishing sites targeting more than 1,200 different brands belonging to 773 parent institutions. Of the top five targeted industries, they accounted for 83.9% of total phishing volume. There are two big takeaways from this finding: financial institutions are back on top, and each industry is still at risk. Through our...
Blog

Phishing Volume Continues to Rise

Back in the olden days of the internet, when AOL's dial-up connection still made horrible sounds prior to getting you access to your inbox, phishing attacks were born. Somewhere in the mid-1990s, internet-based social engineering attacks were born and designed to capture credentials on AOL by way of a program called AOHell, and expanded on to stealing credit card numbers or other private...
Press Release

Over 80% of All Phishing Attacks Targeted U.S. Organizations

Originally published in BLEEPINGCOMPUTER Excerpt: "U.S. entities remained the most attractive targets of phishing attacks throughout 2018, with an estimated 84% of the total volume of millions of incidents analyzed during the last year by threat intelligence company PhishLabs." Read the full article here. ...
Blog

2019 Phishing Trends Intelligence Report: The Growing Social Engineering Threat

Phishing has and will continue to be a threat to anyone connected to the web. This is a fact set in stone, and regardless of advancements in technology, social engineering will allow these attacks to continue to be successful. Today, we are releasing our latest version of the annual Phishing Trends and Intelligence report. Using data collected from millions of social engineering attacks...
Press Release

PhishLabs Releases 2019 Phishing Trends and Intelligence Report, Highlighting The Growing Social Engineering Threat

Overall phishing attack volume grew 40.9% in 2018 Charleston, S.C., April 16, 2019 – PhishLabs, the leading provider of cybersecurity solutions that protect against social engineering, today released its 2019 Phishing Trends and Intelligence Report. Using data collected from millions of social engineering attacks spanning email, web, social media, SMS, and mobile channels, the report highlights...
Blog

BankBot Anubis Switches to Chinese and Adds Telegram for C2

We've recently noticed two significant changes in C2 tactics used by the threat actors behind BankBot Anubis, a mobile banking trojan. First is the use of Chinese characters to encode the C2 strings (in addition to base64 encoding). The second is the use of Telegram Messenger in addition to Twitter for communicating C2 URLs. Previously reported by PhishLabs, the criminals behind BankBot...
Blog

49 Percent of Phishing Sites Now Use HTTPS

Since 2015 there has been a steady increase in threat actors' use of SSL certificates to add an air of legitimacy to malicious websites. By the end of 2017 almost a third of phishing sites had SSL certificates, meaning their URLs began with HTTPS:// and (most) browsers displayed the all-important padlock symbol. In recent months, however, our team has observed an even more dramatic increase...
Press Release

Phishing sites trick users with fake HTTPS padlock

Half of all phishing sites now have padlocks, but are anything but secure Originally published in TechRadar Excerpt: "The padlock icon next to a web address used to let users know that a site is legitimate and secure but now new research from PhishLabs suggests that this is no longer the case as have of all phishing scams are now hosted on websites that have the padlock and begin with HTTPS."...
Blog

BankBot Anubis Still a Threat, Gets Upgrade

Over the past few years mobile banking trojans have been a persistent threat. While Windows desktops and laptops once made up the lion's share of Internet traffic, mobile devices (particularly Android) have long since become the most common means of browsing the web. With banking trojans now incorporating such a wide range of malicious functionality, it's hardly surprising they have become a...
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Understanding Why Spear Phish Are Highly Effective

In the Oscar-winning movie The Sting, Harry Gondorff (played by Paul Newman) explains to his apprentice Johnny Hooker (Robert Redford) that the con that they set up must be so convincing that their mark, Doyle Lonnegan (Robert Shaw) won't even realize that he's been taken. Today, Gondorff and Hooker might not have needed to use a past-posting scheme to con Lonnegan. Instead they might have...
Blog

How To Tackle the Hidden Threat of Social Media

As a marketer I am all too familiar with how social media can benefit or damage a brand. On the one hand, social media offers an easy and (sometimes) free way to communicate with customers, prospects, and partners that many brands have used to great advantage. But on the other hand, it's yet another source of potential threats to an organization's infrastructure and reputation. And for the...
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Silent Librarian University Attacks Continue Unabated in Days Following Indictment

On Friday, March 23, nine Iranian threat actors were indicted for stealing massive quantities of data from universities, businesses, and governments all over the world. If you've been following our blog (or the news), you already know the actors are associated with an organization called the Mabna Institute, and are responsible for stealing more than 31 terabytes of data over the past four and...
Blog

New Variant of BankBot Banking Trojan Ups Ante, Cashes Out on Android Users

A newly observed variant of BankBot has been discovered masquerading as Adobe Flash Player, Avito, and an HD Video Player. This variant, now detected by PhishLabs as BankBot Anubis, was first identified on March 5, 2018. BankBot Anubis takes mobile threats to the next level incorporating ransomware, keylogger abilities, remote access trojan functions, SMS interception, call forwarding, and...
Blog

The 11 Types of Reported Emails

You receive an email, you are unfamiliar with the sender's name or email address, and they are offering you a new service or deal on something. Is it malicious? Not necessarily. Perhaps you forgot about signing up for a newsletter a while back. Malicious Versus Benign According to Symantec, 55.5 percent of business emails are considered spam emails, with the average business account getting...
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Adwind Remote Access Trojan Still Going Strong

A Java-based Adwind Remote Access Trojan campaign has been observed sending spam emails containing a malicious JAR file under the guise of “Request For Quotation,” “Transfer Import,” “Swift Copy,” “Proforma Invoice,” “DHL Delivery Notification” and many others. Adwind, also known as jRAT and JSocket, is a cross-platform remote access tool designed to run on Mac OS, Windows, Linux, and Android...
Blog

Nigerian 419 Scams: How to Spot a Phish

All through October, in aid of National Cyber Security Awareness Month (#CyberAware) we’re putting phishing under the microscope. In each post we’ll take a close look at one specific type of phishing, including the actors responsible, who it targets, and how/why it works. Today, we’re a true phishing classic: Nigerian 419 scams. We've put the 15 best practices for spotting and handling...
Blog

BEC Scams: How to Spot a Phish

All through October, in aid of National Cyber Security Awareness Month (#CyberAware) we’re putting phishing under the microscope. In each post we’ll take a close look at one specific type of phishing, including the actors responsible, who it targets, and how/why it works. Today, we’re exploring one of the most audacious phishing tactics: Business email compromise (BEC) also known as CEO scams....
Press Release

The Phishie Awards: (Dis)Honoring The Best Of The Worst Phishing Attacks

The FBI dubbed the category of attacks “business email compromise” in an August advisory. At that time, the Bureau estimated that, since 2013, the total dollar losses to American companies exceeded $740 million, while only hitting around 7,000 targets. When international victims are added in, the losses total $1.2 billion. Don Jackson, threat researcher and malware analyst for PhishLabs explains,...