“msnbc.com – BREAKING NEWS: [video] Bush Tours America” Email

Posted August 3, 2008 

MSNBC is so considerate. I never even signed up for their email and they’re sending me thrilling, mind-blowing political news.

But despite my excitement about more Bush hating (yawn), I right-clicked the links, and they send me to http://dialogprint.ru/msnonline.html, not MSNBC.com.

When I went to http://dialogprint.ru/msnonline.html — as you shouldn’t! Do as I say, not as I do, youngun — and I got a popup:

The page at http://dialogprint.ru says:
Video ActiveX Object Error
Your browser cannot play this video file.
Click ‘OK’ to download and install missing Video ActiveX Object.”

Of course, I click cancel. But Dialogprint.ru is really looking out for me:

The page at http://dialogprint.ru says:
Please install new version of Video ActiveX Object.”

Seems a little strange, right?

Well, it’s only half as strange as the charges that’ll show up on your credit card if you click “OK”, download the “Video ActiveX Object” (adobe_flash.exe) that’s really a Trojan, that’ll allow a hacker to spy on you.

Another damn day, another damn scam.

“msnbc.com – BREAKING NEWS: [video] Bush Tours America” Email Is Ugly

“msnbc.com – BREAKING NEWS: [video] Bush Tours America” Email

1“msnbc.com – BREAKING NEWS: [video] Bush Tours America” Email Is Stupid

From: lvtnimem@8.free3host.net
Subject: msnbc.com – BREAKING NEWS: [video] Bush Tours America To Survey Damage Caused By His Disastrous Presidency
Reply-To: lvtnimem@8.free3host.net

msnbc.com: BREAKING NEWS: [video] Bush Tours America To Survey Damage Caused By His Disastrous Presidency

Find out more at http://breakingnews.msnbc.com

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“msnbc.com – BREAKING NEWS: [video] Bush Tours America” Email Might Be a Phishing Email

WTF is a Phishing Email?

Phishing emails are fake emails sent by people trying to steal your financial information or identity. Phishing is just what it sounds like: only instead of someone fishing for fish, phishers are going after human catches.

Some phishing emails are disguised as charities looking for a donation after a big natural disaster, other phishing emails will look like an e-card you need to retrieve, but most phishing emails pretend to be from a big bank concerned about your account.

Now, let’s talk about…

Why Phishing Emails Suck

Phishing emails, like “msnbc.com – BREAKING NEWS: [video] Bush Tours America” Email, generally look authentic, but there are a few ways to realize they’re faker than a chest on a Playboy bunny.

  • Scare tactics: Most phishing emails will tell you that your financial account has been closed and you need to take immediate action to restore it. If you have reason to think an email like this is real, type your bank’s website address into your browser. Never click any of the links an email like this.
  • Fake hyperlinks: Phishing emails will show you a hyperlinked URL that, if you click it, sends you to a completely different website. It’s at this scam website–which may look pretty real except for the revealed URL–that phishers usually try to capture your login information.
  • Domain name forgery: Once you click this link and get taken to the phishing website, sometimes even then you can’t see the real URL of the site–it may be disguised with javascript to read like a trusted domain (for example, the phishers might use code to make your browser display www.trustedbank.co.uk, when you’re really visiting www.damnscam.co.uk/trustedbank-phishing.htm).
  • Images instead of text: Phishing emails sometimes use a graphic of text instead of actual words, so that they can bypass your spam detectors. Remember that pretty V1AGARA or C1ALIS picture you got recently?
  • Undisclosed recipients: The better phishing emails don’t make this mistake, but a lot of times phishing emails will spam a ton of people at once and leave the “To:” section reading “undisclosed recipients”–even though the email is supposed to address your account in particular.

Did “msnbc.com – BREAKING NEWS: [video] Bush Tours America” Email use these moves to try to scam you?

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