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News for 3 July 2009 Year

  • 21:01 Kentucky payroll phishing scam nets small fortune
  • Blue grass county hit by Trojan-fueled cybercrime

    A gang of cybercrooks has made off with $415,000 from the coffers of Bullitt County, Kentucky following the conclusion of an elaborate phishing scam, The Washington Post reports.

    >>>

  • 19:34 A Diverse Portfolio of Fake Security Software - Part Twenty Two
  • Part twenty two of the diverse portfolio of fake security software series will summarize the typosquatted scareware serving domains currently in circulation, pushed through the usual distribution channels, but will also emphasize on the "money trail", namely the payment processing gateways used in the scareware campaigns.

    In this particular case the scareware front-ends ultimately leading to ChronoPay, which Germany-based Pandora Software has been abusing since 2008 under its countless number of aliases such as Meyrocorp for instance.

    The scareware domains are as follows:
    atomscan6 .info - 38.105.19.27 - Email: donboset@gmail.com
    listscan6 .com - Email: loiskiltz@gmail.com
    goscanedge .com - Email: subtenda@gmail.com
    goscanfine. com - Email: chirelqas@gmail.com
    in6ch .com - Email: relgetn@gmail.com
    goscanrich .com - Email: pathstals@gmail.com
    goscanrank .com - Email: alcnafuch@gmail.com
    ina6sk .com - Email: equatelepi@gmail.com
    in6sk .com - Email: thomas.truby@gmail.com
    goscanslim .com - Email: chinrfi@gmail.com
    gowidescan .com - Email: alcnafuch@gmail.com
    goedgescan .com - Email: subtenda@gmail.com
    gofinescan .com - Email: alcnafuch@gmail.com
    goelitescan .com - Email: funully@gmail.com
    gorichscan .com - Email: pathstals@gmail.com
    goslimscan .com - Email: chinrfi@gmail.com
    gosoonscan .com - Email: aloxier@gmail.com
    goironscan .com - Email: aloxier@gmail.com
    goflexscan .com - Email: alcnafuch@gmail.com
    gomanyscan .com - Email: alcnafuch@gmail.com
    goscaniron .com - Email: aloxier@gmail.com
    ina6co .com - Email: equatelepi@gmail.com
    in6co .com - Email: thomas.truby@gmail.com
    goscantop .com - Email: funully@gmail.com
    ina6iq .com - Email: equatelepi@gmail.com
    goscanstar .com - Email: stgeyman@gmail.com
    goscanflex .com - Email: chirelqas@gmail.com
    goscanmany .com - Email: chirelqas@gmail.com
    scantrue6 .info - Email: jokinzer@gmail.com
    scantool6 .info - Email: jokinzer@gmail.com
    scanzoom6 .info - Email: jokinzer@gmail.com
    litescan6 .info - Email: litescan6.info
    truescan6 .info - Email: jokinzer@gmail.com
    toolscan6 .info - Email: jokinzer@gmail.com

    atomscan6 .info - Email: donboset@gmail.com
    genscan6 .info - Email: imendegal@gmail.com
    luxscan6 .info - Email: donboset@gmail.com
    wayscan6 .info - Email: jokinzer@gmail.com
    scanuser6 .info - Email: jokinzer@gmail.com
    scanway6 .info - Email: jokinzer@gmail.com
    scan6line .info - Email: jokinzer@gmail.com
    scan6note .info - Email: jokinzer@gmail.com
    scan6true .info - Email: jokinzer@gmail.com
    scan6tool .info - Email: jokinzer@gmail.com
    true6scan .info - Email: jokinzer@gmail.com
    tool6scan .info - Email: jokinzer@gmail.com
    top6scan .info - Email: jokinzer@gmail.com
    user6scan .info - Email: jokinzer@gmail.com
    list6scan .info - Email: jokinzer@gmail.com
    way6scan .info - Email: jokinzer@gmail.com
    scan6user .info - Email: jokinzer@gmail.com
    scan6list .info - Email: jokinzer@gmail.com
    scan6fix .info - Email: jokinzer@gmail.com
    scan6way .info - Email: jokinzer@gmail.com

    It's pretty obvious case demonstrating the dynamics of the underground ecosystem. A thousand bogus accounts purchased for $10 used in a bulk registration of scareware serving domains on a revenue sharing affiliate model ends up in a win-win-win situation for the cybercriminals involved in these processes. The practice is becoming rather popular not only due to their interest in less centralization of the domain control under a single email address -- cross checking reveals the entire portfolio managed under it -- but due to the availability of the service.

    clean-pc-now .net -  94.75.233.162 - Email: robertsimonkroon@gmail.com
    fast-spyware-cleaner .org - Email: robertsimonkroon@gmail.com
    spyware-scaner .com - Email: robertsimonkroon@gmail.com
    scan-pc-now .com - Email: robertsimonkroon@gmail.com
    free-tube-porn .biz - Email: robertsimonkroon@gmail.com
    spyware-killer .biz - Email: robertsimonkroon@gmail.com

    softportal-extrafiles .com - 64.20.38.172
    exe-profile .com - Email: kimwerner92@yahoo.com
    extrafiles-softportal .com - Email: opipkl@googlemail.com
    softportal-files .com - Email: kimwerner92@yahoo.com
    softportal-extrafiles .com
    load-exe-soft .com - Email: kimwerner92@yahoo.com
    exe-box .com - Email: normtroup@yahoo.com
    hot-exe-area .net - Email: josepetie@gmail.com

    spywarecomputerscanv2 .com - 69.10.59.35 - Email: huang@bark.edu.hk
    1live-antimalware-pro-scan .com - Email: hongkong@campusparis.org
    1live-antimalware-scanner .com - Email: hongkong@campusparis.org
    folderantispywarescanner .com - Email: xinhuawuhan@yahoo.com
    antivirushelpscanner .com - Email: info@brandturkey.com
    fastfolderscanner .com - Email: info@brandturkey.com
    mycomputerscanner .com - Email: vanmullem@yahoo.com

    restricteddomainhelp .com - 83.133.124.81 - Email: franklinnig@yahoo.com
    msncoreupdate .com - Email: jen@parallelslive.cn
    world-payment-system .com - Email: info@yashitaindian.com
    liveinternetupdates .com - Email: kuzya77@freebbmail.com
    onlineantivirusmarket .com Email: podbisb@hotmail.com

    threats-scanner .com - 69.4.230.204 - Email: vanmullem@yahoo.com
    securitypcscanner2 .com - Email: office@actionaidinusa.org
    anti-virussecurity3 .com - Email:  office@actionaidinusa.org
    private-online-scan .com - Email: info@kianah.org
    liveantivirusproscan .com - Email: second@freebbmail.com
    no1virusscan .com - Email: info@kianah.org
    my-private-protection .com - Email: info@kianah.org
    scanmyfolders .com - Email: info@kianah.org
    scanmycomputerforvirus .com - Email: vanmullem@yahoo.com

    onlinescan-ultraantivirus2009  .com - 206.53.61.76
    relevantwebsearches .com
    virussweeper-scanvirus .com
    guardincorp  .info
    mainsecsys .info - Email: andrew.fbecket@gmail.com
    guardsecurity .info - Email: poljaykop@gmail.com
    virusalarm-scanvirus .net

    best-protect .info - 174.142.113.205 - Email: chainadmin@gmail.com
    best-protect-av1 .info - Email: chainadmin@gmail.com
    best-antivirus-pc   .info - Email: chainadmin@gmail.com
    best-av1-protect .info - Email: chainadmin@gmail.com
    av1-protect .info - Email: chainadmin@gmail.com
    av1-best-protect .info - Email: chainadmin@gmail.com
    best-protect .info - Email: chainadmin@gmail.com
    best-av .info - Email: chainadmin@gmail.com

    pay-virusshield .cn - 64.213.140.70 - Email: unitedisystems@gmail.com
    shieldinc .info
    systemprotectinc .info
    ironshield .info
    myofficeguard .info
    protectionurl .info
    my-protection .info
    antivirus09  .net
    fast-antivirus.net

    virusshieldpro  .com - 64.86.16.127 - Email: unitedisystems@gmail.com
    prestotuneup .com - Email: hycderxvur@whoisservices.cn
    virussweeper-scanvirus .com
    virusmelt .com - Email: nuhuarrczq@whoisservices.cn
    systemsec .info
    shieldinc .info
    myofficeguard .info
    protect-online .info
    protectionlol .info
    protectionurl .info
    virussweeper-scan .net

    advanced-virus-remover2009 .com - 92.241.176.188 - Email: masle@masle.kz
    trucount3005 .com - Email: chen.poon1732646@yahoo.com
    antivirus-scan-2009 .com - Email: cheng2009@yahoo.com
    antivirusxppro-2009 .com - Email: u@sochi.ru
    advanced-virusremover2009 .com - Email: giogr@ua.fm
    bestscanpc .com
    trucountme .com - Email: valentin@gergiea.kz
    vs-codec-pro .com - Email:  bhtjnjhggn@googlemail.com
    vscodec-pro .com - Email: cyber38462@hotmail.com
    antivirus-2009-ppro .com - Email: cheng2009@yahoo.com
    onlinescanxppro .com - Email: chen.poon1732646@yahoo.com
    downloadavr .com - Email: gorbun@ua.fm
    bestscanpc .net

    activation-antivirus-software .com - 208.43.124.83 - Email: matlee@fsuk.edu
    fxantispy .com - Email: TycoonMichael@googlemail.com
    my-protection .info - 64.213.140.70 - Email: hop.davis@gmail.com
    protectonline .info - 64.86.17.47 - Email: hop.davis@gmail.com
    safetywwwtools .com - 209.44.126.36 - Email: martin.s.johnson@spambob.com
    defenderupdates2 .com - 89.248.168.46 - Email: china@seban.se
    securitytoolsdirect .com - 209.44.126.22 - Email: RuthMMarcotte@text2re.com
    best-antivirus-security .com - 84.16.237.52 - Email: valentinyermolaev@gmail.com
    malwaresdestructor .com - 206.53.61.74
    suprotect .com - 89.149.212.218 - uuuuu@ua.fm
    threatpcscanner .com - 63.223.110.177 ; 78.47.132.216 ; 78.47.172.66 - Email: vanmullem@yahoo.com
    antimalwareliveproscannerv3 .com - Email: vanmullem@yahoo.com
    antivirus-online-pro-scan .com - Email: vanmullem@yahoo.com
    avpro-labs .com - 213.182.197.229
    avprotectionstat .com - 74.50.99.236
    explorerfilescan .com - 63.223.110.178; 78.47.132.221; 78.47.172.68 Email: xinhuawuhan@yahoo.com
    antivirushelpscanner .com  A  83.133.125.116; 69.10.59.35; 83.133.125.116 - Email: info@brandturkey.com
    fastfolderscanner .com - Email: info@brandturkey.com
    mycomputerscanner .com - Email: info@brandturkey.com
    mal-warexls .net - 72.9.108.26 - Email: joehugardo@ya.ru
    internetware-safe .com - Email: candikeller@ya.ru

    scanonlinesite .info - 66.148.74.126
    scanonlineblog .info
    scanonlineshop .info
    scanonlinenow .info

    youravprotection .com - 74.50.98.162 - Email: armandgregory3@gmail.com
    registerantivirus .com Email: ed.areyra@gmail.com
    avprotectionstat .com

    avagent-pro .com - 83.133.126.46 - Email: dwrdcardenas95@gmail.com
    downloads-123 .com - Email: dwrdcardenas95@gmail.com
    soft-process .com - Email: dwrdcardenas95@gmail.com
    download-123 .cn - Email: dwrdcardenas95@gmail.com
    actupdate .net - Email: dwrdcardenas95@gmail.com

    Now the emphasis on the payment gateways, currently active and processing the scareware transactions:
    softwaresecuredbilling .com - 209.8.45.122 - TemchenkoViktor@googlemail.com
    softsales-discount .com - Email: daunrwwciq@whoisservices.cn
    best-internet-payments  .com - 209.8.45.148 - Email: specsupport@gmail.com
    adioro .com - 213.174.152.32 - Email: xyhsbjlrl@whoisprivacyprotect.com
    secure-plus-payments .com - 209.8.25.204 - Email: sparck000@mail.com
    secure.pnm-software .com - 209.8.45.124 - Email: pnm-software.com@liveinternetmarketingltd.com
    soft-process .com - 83.133.126.46 - Email: XtPbtP@privacypost.com
    privatesecuredpayments .com - 78.46.216.238 - Email: TemchenkoViktor@googlemail.com

    These payment processing gateways are sometimes front-end to the original and often legitimate payment processors. In this particular case, the the legitimate processor is Netherlands-based ChronoPay, which is known to have been used in the past by affiliates in the scareware affiliate model in the past, with several complaints for repeated credit card billing, which in reality is included in the scareware's Terms of Service.

    Upon a successful purchase - the customer is told that "This charge will appear on your card statement as CHRPay.com/ducforceide". Interestingly, Pandora Software has also been using the following ChronoPay accounts for over an year - Chrpay.com/meyrocorp; CHrpay.com/pnra using disconnected numbers, CallerID's of scareware operations, desperate attempts to contact the alias for the front-end payment processor, ultimately resulting in several hundred ChronoPay related complaints.

    Next to scareware, ChronoPay (Pavel Vrublevsky acting as CEO) is also known to have been used in a mobile application scam dissected here, as well as being a victim of a DDoS attack in 2008, which is pretty logical since if ChronoPay is the payment processor of choice for the hundreds of thousands of scareware generated revenues on daily basis, the commissions ChronoPay takes from cybercriminals would be more than welcome in the competing payment processor's network.

    Related posts:
    Dissecting a Swine Flu Black SEO Campaign
    Massive Blackhat SEO Campaign Serving Scareware
    From Ukrainian Blackhat SEO Gang With Love
    From Ukrainian Blackhat SEO Gang With Love - Part Two
    From Ukraine with Scareware Serving Tweets, Bogus LinkedIn/Scribd Accounts, and Blackhat SEO Farms
    Fake Web Hosting Provider - Front-end to Scareware Blackhat SEO Campaign at Blogspot

    A Diverse Portfolio of Fake Security Software - Part Twenty One
    A Diverse Portfolio of Fake Security Software - Part Twenty
    A Diverse Portfolio of Fake Security Software - Part Nineteen
    A Diverse Portfolio of Fake Security Software - Part Eighteen
    A Diverse Portfolio of Fake Security Software - Part Seventeen
    A Diverse Portfolio of Fake Security Software - Part Sixteen
    A Diverse Portfolio of Fake Security Software - Part Fifteen
    A Diverse Portfolio of Fake Security Software - Part Fourteen
    A Diverse Portfolio of Fake Security Software - Part Thirteen
    A Diverse Portfolio of Fake Security Software - Part Twelve
    A Diverse Portfolio of Fake Security Software - Part Eleven
    A Diverse Portfolio of Fake Security Software - Part Ten
    A Diverse Portfolio of Fake Security Software - Part Nine
    A Diverse Portfolio of Fake Security Software - Part Eight
    A Diverse Portfolio of Fake Security Software - Part Seven
    A Diverse Portfolio of Fake Security Software - Part Six
    A Diverse Portfolio of Fake Security Software - Part Five
    A Diverse Portfolio of Fake Security Software - Part Four
    A Diverse Portfolio of Fake Security Software - Part Three
    A Diverse Portfolio of Fake Security Software - Part Two
    Diverse Portfolio of Fake Security Software

    This post has been reproduced from Dancho Danchev's blog.
    >>>

  • 16:02 Latin Best Buy surfers sprayed by drive-by download malware
  • Ay, Caramba!

    Hackers have invaded the Best Buy website to plant exploit code targeted at South and central American surfers.

    >>>

  • 15:15 A closer look at SpywareBlaster 4.2
  • SpywareBlaster prevents the installation of ActiveX-based spyware, adware, dialers, browser hijackers, and other potentially unwanted programs. It can also block spyware/tracking cookies in IE, Mozill... >>>

  • 14:03 A practical guide to disaster recovery planning
  • Two papers for smaller businesses

    Typically, vendor white papers are written with the ITDM or senior ITDM at a large company, in mind. [ITDM is industry jargon for "IT decision maker", since you ask.] People working at smaller companies are rather less well served, in quantity and quality. So today we focus our Reg Library selection on a couple of good papers aimed at small and medium-sized businesses.

    Case Study: WhatsUp keeps Legoland turnstyles ringing

    >>>

  • 13:55 Hackers crack ColdFusion
  • Drive-by download attack hits multiple hosts

    Hackers are running a mass compromise against sites running vulnerable ColdFusion application server installations.

    >>>

  • 13:27 Off the wire: Whitepaper - Understanding and using Radio Frequency Identification (RFID)
  • Read this in depth overview of RFID technology and capabilities, major standards and ways to improve convenience, accuracy, safety and security. >>>

  • 11:07 Monthly Malware Statistics: June 2009
  • As in previous months, this malware rating is compiled from data generated by the Kaspersky Security Network (KSN). However, slightly different methods have been used to select and analyze the data. >>>

  • 07:36 Month Of Twitter Bugs exposes micro-blogging flaws
  • Making a hashtag of Web 2.0 security

    The Month Of Twitter Bugs has begun with the publication of a flaw in a URL shortening service often used in conjunction with the micro-blogging service.

    Case Study: WhatsUp keeps Legoland turnstyles ringing

    >>>

  • 00:30 Texting vuln turns iPhone into remote bugging device
  • SpyPhone 3GS

    If you own an iPhone, security researcher Charlie Miller can take control of it, and short of turning off the device, it appears there isn't much you can do to stop him. Not until Apple fixes the flaw, anyway.

    The power of collaboration within unified communications

    >>>

  • 00:00 Friday Squid Blogging: Office Squid
  • Office squid.

    >>>

  • 00:00 The Pros and Cons of Password Masking
  • Usability guru Jakob Nielsen opened up a can of worms when he made the case for unmasking passwords in his blog. I chimed in that I agreed. Almost 165 comments on my blog (and several articles, essays, and many other blog posts) later, the consensus is that we were wrong.

    I was certainly too glib. Like any security countermeasure, password masking has value. But like any countermeasure, password masking is not a panacea. And the costs of password masking need to be balanced with the benefits.

    The cost is accuracy. When users don't get visual feedback from what they're typing, they're more prone to make mistakes. This is especially true with character strings that have non-standard characters and capitalization. This has several ancillary costs:

    Users get pissed off. Users are more likely to choose easy-to-type passwords, reducing both mistakes and security. Removing password masking will make people more comfortable with complicated passwords: they'll become easier to memorize and easier to use.

    The benefits of password masking are more obvious:

    Security from shoulder surfing. If people can't look over your shoulder and see what you're typing, they're much less likely to be able to steal your password. Yes, they can look at your fingers instead, but that's much harder than looking at the screen. Surveillance cameras are also an issue: it's easier to watch someone's fingers on recorded video, but reading a cleartext password off a screen is trivial.

    In some situations, there is a trust dynamic involved. Do you type your password while your boss is standing over your shoulder watching? How about your spouse or partner? Your parent or child? Your teacher or students? At ATMs, there's a social convention of standing away from someone using the machine, but that convention doesn't apply to computers. You might not trust the person standing next to you enough to let him see your password, but don't feel comfortable telling him to look away. Password masking solves that social awkwardness.

    Security from screen scraping malware. This is less of an issue; keyboard loggers are more common and unaffected by password masking. And if you have that kind of malware on your computer, you've got all sorts of problems.

    A security "signal." Password masking alerts users, and I'm thinking users who aren't particularly security savvy, that passwords are a secret.

    I believe that shoulder surfing isn't nearly the problem it's made out to be. One, lots of people use their computers in private, with no one looking over their shoulders. Two, personal handheld devices are used very close to the body, making shoulder surfing all that much harder. Three, it's hard to quickly and accurately memorize a random non-alphanumeric string that flashes on the screen for a second or so.

    This is not to say that shoulder surfing isn't a threat. It is. And, as many readers pointed out, password masking is one of the reasons it isn't more of a threat. And the threat is greater for those who are not fluent computer users: slow typists and people who are likely to choose bad passwords. But I believe that the risks are overstated.

    Password masking is definitely important on public terminals with short PINs. (I'm thinking of ATMs.) The value of the PIN is large, shoulder surfing is more common, and a four-digit PIN is easy to remember in any case.

    And lastly, this problem largely disappears on the Internet on your personal computer. Most browsers include the ability to save and then automatically populate password fields, making the usability problem go away at the expense of another security problem (the security of the password becomes the security of the computer). There's a Firefox plugin that gets rid of password masking. And programs like my own Password Safe allow passwords to be cut and pasted into applications, also eliminating the usability problem.

    One approach is to make it a configurable option. High-risk banking applications could turn password masking on by default; other applications could turn it off by default. Browsers in public locations could turn it on by default. I like this, but it complicates the user interface.

    A reader mentioned BlackBerry's solution, which is to display each character briefly before masking it; that seems like an excellent compromise.

    I, for one, would like the option. I cannot type complicated WEP keys into Windows -- twice! what's the deal with that? -- without making mistakes. I cannot type my rarely used and very complicated PGP keys without making a mistake unless I turn off password masking. That's what I was reacting to when I said "I agree."

    So was I wrong? Maybe. Okay, probably. Password masking definitely improves security; many readers pointed out that they regularly use their computer in crowded environments, and rely on password masking to protect their passwords. On the other hand, password masking reduces accuracy and makes it less likely that users will choose secure and hard-to-remember passwords, I will concede that the password masking trade-off is more beneficial than I thought in my snap reaction, but also that the answer is not nearly as obvious as we have historically assumed.

    >>>

  • 00:00 The Insecurity of Secrecy
  • Good essay -- "The Staggering Cost of Playing it 'Safe'" -- about the political motivations for terrorist security policy.

    Senator Barbara Boxer has led an effort to at least put together a public database of ash storage sites so that people can judge the risk to the areas where they live. However, even this effort has been blocked not by coal companies or utilities, but by the DHS. How could it possibly be a national security interest to cover up the location of material that's "not toxic or anything?" It's not. In fact, even if the ash turns out to be as bad as its worst critics fear, blocking the database is far more dangerous than revealing the location of these sites. Not only has there not been any threat against these sites by terrorists, and no workable scenario by which they might cause a problem, coal slurry impoundments are already failing with regularity, dousing parts of America with millions of gallons of this material. It doesn't take terrorists to make this happen.

    Blocking the release of this information doesn't protect the citizens of the United States in any way. It's just another example of the same creeping secrecy that makes cities more difficult to manage because of secrecy over facilities. The same creeping secrecy that "blurs" national monuments from images and puts intentional gaps in public information. The same creeping secrecy that increasingly elevates the most unlikely attack -- the shoe bombers of the world -- above our right to know what's going on around us so that we can make informed decisions. The same secrecy that defends torturers.

    >>>

  • 00:00 News: iPhone crashing bug could lead to serious exploit
  • iPhone crashing bug could lead to serious exploit >> Advertisement << Can you answer the ERP quiz? These 10 questions determine if your Enterprise RP rollout gets an A+. http://www.findtechinfo.com/as/acs?pl=781&ca=909 >>>

  • 00:00 Brief: Researcher aims to tweet Month of Bugs
  • Researcher aims to tweet Month of Bugs >>>




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