ESET Threat Blog

Archive for the 'Social Engineering' Category

by Aryeh Goretsky Distinguished Researcher
May 22, 2012 at 12:38 pm

At ESET, we spend a great deal of time researching the latest technologies and how they may be affected by frauds and scams.  Sometimes these are "old fashioned" spam through email, or they may be programs like fake antivirus programs or ransomware. And we certainly have blogged extensively about PC support scams where the caller … Read More…

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by Robert Lipovsky Malware Researcher
March 14, 2012 at 10:55 am

Fraudsters continue to innovate their scam propagation methods. Again using Facebook and a pretense of a shocking video, they also utilize browser plugins to execute malicious scripts. We also see how the malware scene is intertwined, when the user is directed to a dubious Potentially Unwanted Application.
Facebook auto-like scams have been commonplace on the world’s … Read More…

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by David Harley Senior Research Fellow
February 14, 2012 at 8:42 am

 Here are some further thoughts arising from the ACPO National Cyber Crime Conference held recently in the UK*.

DAC Janet Williams, ACPO’s e-Crime lead, summarized the current initiatives along these lines (apologies if I’ve introduced too many of my own preconceptions):

The UK intends to tackle cybercrime and make this one of the safest places to do … Read More…

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by Stephen Cobb ESET Security Evangelist
February 7, 2012 at 4:06 pm

Scam artists and cybercriminals are looking to turn romance into profit now that Valentine's Day approaches, possibly taking over your computer in the process. According to ESET researchers in Latin America, we can expect the quest for love to be leveraged as an effective social engineering ploy to enable the bad guys to infect unsuspecting … Read More…

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by EsetResearch
January 20, 2012 at 11:31 pm

Yesterday’s announcement by the US Department of Justice that the operators of file-sharing site Megaupload had been indicted for operating a criminal enterprise that generated over $175 million by trafficking in over half a billion dollars of pirated copyrighted material has sent shockwaves across the Internet.  The accuracy of those figures may be questionable, but … Read More…

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by Aryeh Goretsky Distinguished Researcher
January 18, 2012 at 12:28 pm

Tomorrow, on January 18, 2012, dozens of popular websites covering a diverse range of subjects will be blacking out their home pages in protest of the U.S. Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA).  Some of these websites are well-known, such as the English language web site for the encyclopedic Wikipedia and quirky news site Boing Boing, … Read More…

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by David Harley Senior Research Fellow
January 12, 2012 at 11:26 am

It's a little ironic. My earlier blog Autorun and Conficker not dead yet: Threat Trends Report shows that over the whole year, Conficker and INF/Autorun maintained the top two places worldwide according to our ThreatSense.Net® telemetry. This morning I got to see the ThreatSense statistics just for the month of December.

As you'd expect, INF/Autorun and Win32/Conficker are … Read More…

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by Aryeh Goretsky Distinguished Researcher
December 15, 2011 at 12:56 pm

While I share the reluctance of my colleagues to predict the future, I think there are some trends that can be classified as “reasonably likely to occur” in 2012. I make no promises, but here’s what I think we will see, in no particular order of importance or certainty.

We will see increased interest in digitally … Read More…

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by David Harley Senior Research Fellow
December 1, 2011 at 9:00 am

Danish security company CSIS have reported a worm that really does spread through Facebook, unlike some of the malware we've seen described in hoaxes recently. Peter Kruse tells us that the worm logs in as the owner of the infected system and spams messages to his or her friends. The message consists of a link … Read More…

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by Aryeh Goretsky Distinguished Researcher
November 17, 2011 at 10:28 am

Since yesterday’s Much Ado About Facebook post in the ESET Threat Blog, we have written additional articles, received a few comments, and also received updated information on the “threat,” so it seems that now is a good time for a follow-up article.  Reports continue to come in of pornographic and violent imagery on Facebook, and … Read More…

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