Another Phishing Scam Targets Facebook Users
And the hits just keep coming: For the second time in the span of a
week, the popular social networking site Facebook was the target of
another phishing scam. This time, users were sent an e-mail message
with the subject line "Hello" then directed to a false Facebook page
where they were asked to enter account passwords.
The hackers, who attempted to direct users to the Websites "areps.at",
"best.at" "kirgo.at" or "brunga.at" were attempting to gain access to
users' personal information as well as profile information about
friends and relatives connected to the user.
Facebook spokesman Barry Schnitt told
ABCNews.com the phishing impacts have not been widespread and affected
just a small group of accounts. "We've been updating our monitoring
systems with information gleaned from the previous attacks so that each
new attack is detected more quickly," he told the news organization.
"Our technical efforts and user education initiatives are significantly
reducing the impact of each subsequent attack."
As before, the company was quick to assure users the malicious links
had been blocked and fake wall posts and messages were deleted. "We
have already blocked links to these new phishing sites from being
shared on Facebook, have had them added to the 'block' list of the
major (Web) browsers and have begun working with partners to have the
sites taken down completely," Schnitt told
msnbc.com. "Be cautious of any message, post or link you find on
Facebook that looks suspicious or requires an additional log-in," he
said.
On May 15, news broke that a similar scam was targeting Facebook users
by tricking them into visiting a fake Web page designed to look like
Facebook pages. Facebook posted a blog post written by an incident
response manager on the security team at Facebook alerting users to the
problem and offering help on how to avoid the scam.
Schnitt, and the company's blog, are encouraging users to get on the
offensive and help protect themselves from attacks. Recommendations
include using an up-to-date browser such as Firefox 3.0.10 or Internet
Explorer 8 that features anti-phishing black lists, using unique logins
and passwords for each of the Websites users visit, checking to see
that users are logging in from a legitimate Facebook page and being
cautious of any message, post or link you find on Facebook that looks
suspicious or requires an additional login.
Following the first wave of phishing attacks this month, Facebook and
brand protection company MarkMonitor announced that Facebook is using
MarkMonitor's AntiFraud Solutions to supplement Facebook's own in-house
security efforts in protecting users against malware attacks. Facebook,
which already uses MarkMonitor AntiFraud Solutions to help combat
phishing attacks, said it is expanding its use of MarkMonitor to
further protect Facebook and its users from ongoing malware attacks.
