Harmful Email Subjects to Avoid I. Emails from people trying to infect your system and steal your friends' email addresses for spam
I.1. Pictures of Osama Bin Laden hanging or Arnold Schwarzenegger's suicide note
I.2. Email that seems to come from your system administrator or other familiar sender that says your email could not be delivered, or some similar statement.
I.3. Email with subject "Against!" or "Revenge"
I.4. Email with subject Re_ and body with animals or foto or other subjects II. Emails from people trying to steal your identity (and your money)
II.1. Update Your Billing Information (from eBay) II.2. Your account at eBay has been suspended II.3. Your account at Wells Fargo has been suspended II.4. Notification of US Bank Internet Banking II.5. Attn: Citibank Update II.6 Confirm AOL Billing Info
III. Emails from people trying to fool you into hurting yourself or your friends and coworkers
III.1 Subject: "jdbg" Virus: how to detect and remove. ***************************************************************************************************** More Details About Each Attack I: Emails from people trying to infect your system and steal your friends' names for spam I.1. Name: Hackarmy The bait: An email or news article claiming to offer you copies of pictures of Osama Bin Laden being hanged. A second form claims to have a suicide note from Arnold Schwarzenegger.
How it infects your system: You click on a link that downloads a zip file. You execute the file thinking you will see the pictures.
What it does to you: Gives attackers remote control of your computer so they can use it in attacks on other people, or harvest email names for spam.
Where to find detailed information: http://securityresponse.symantec.com/avcenter/venc/data/backdoor.hacarmy...
I.2. Name: Mydoom-O The bait: An email that seems to come from your mail or system administrator or from another familiar sender, with an attachment and with any one of the following subjects: (1) say helo to my litl friend, (2) click me baby, (3) one more time, (4) hello, (5) error, (6) status, (7) test, (8) report, delivery failed, (9) Message could not be delivered, (10) Mail System Error - Returned Mail, (11) Delivery reports about your e-mail, (12) Returned mail: see transcript for details, (13) Returned mail: Data format error. How it infects your system: You download and open the attachment. What it does to you: Steals all email addresses from you to be sold to Spammers; spreads to other sites from your machine. It also uses your system to send requests to search engines like Google to look for more email addresses. Where to find more detailed information: http://securityresponse.symantec.com/avcenter/venc/data/w32.mydoom.m@mm....
I.3. Name: Atak-C The bait: An email that arrives with the subject "Attack!" or "Revenge" and a zipped attachment How it infects your system: You download and open the attachment. What it does to you: Steals all email addresses from you to be sold to spammers. Where to find more detailed information: http://www.sophos.com/virusinfo/analyses/w32atakc.html I.4. Name: Beagle The bait: An email with subject Re_ and body with animals or foto or other subjects, and an attachment. How it infects your system: You download and open the attachment. What it does to you: Disables antivirus and other important software, mass mails itself to others, steals email addresses from throughout your files, gives attacker remote control of your computer to use to attack other systems. Where to find more detailed information: http://www3.ca.com/securityadvisor/virusinfo/virus.aspx?id=39641 *********************************************************************** II. Emails from people trying to steal your identity (and your money) II.1 Update Your Billing Information (from eBay) The bait: An email that looks as if it comes from eBay saying the company has "detected a slight error in your billing information" and saying that you must fix it within 48 hours to continue to buy or sell on eBay. What it tries to make you do: Click on a link and tell them your eBay and PayPal username and password, and your credit/debit card information Where you can see how it actually appears: http://www.antiphishing.org/phishing_archive/07-27-04%20Ebay%20(Update%20Your%20Billing%20Informations).html II.2 Your account at eBay has been suspended The bait: An email that looks as if it comes from eBay saying your account has been suspended and "We had to block your eBay account" What it tries to make you do: Click on a link and tell them your eBay and PayPal username and password, and your credit/debit card information Where you can see how it actually appears: http://www.antiphishing.org/phishing_archive/07-26-04_Ebay_(your_account_at_ebay_has_been_suspended).html II.3 Your account at Wells Fargo has been suspended The bait: An email that looks as if it comes from Wells Fargo saying your account has been suspended and "Your account has been compromised by outside parties." What it tries to make you do: Click on a link and tell them your username, password, and credit card information. Where you can see how it actually appears: http://www.antiphishing.org/phishing_archive/06-29-04_Wells_Fargo_(Your_account_at_Wells_Fargo_has_been_suspended).html II.4. Notification of US Bank Internet Banking The bait: An email that looks as if it comes from US Bank saying, "as a preventative measure, we have temporarily limited access to some features." What it tries to make you do: Click on a link and tell them username, password, credit card data or debit card data. Where you can see how it actually appears: http://www.antiphishing.org/phishing_archive/07-23-04_US_Bank_(Notification_of_US_Bank_Internet_Banking).html II.5. Attn: Citibank Update The bait: "Click here" link in an email that seems to come from Citibank. What it tries to make you do: Click on a link and tell them personal information and credit card or debit card data. Where you can see how it actually appears: http://www.fraudwatchinternational.com/fraud_alerts/040721_1046_citibank... http://www.antiphishing.org/phishing_archive/07-21-04_Citibank_(Attn_Citibank_Update).html II.6 Confirm AOL Billing Info The bait: An email that seems to come from AOL saying your billing information is out of date and asking you to "spend several minutes and update your billing records." What it tries to make you do: Click on a link and tell them personal information and credit card or debit card data. Where you can see how it actually appears: http://www.antiphishing.org/phishing_archive/07-20-04_AOL_(Confirm_AOL_billing_info).html *********************************************************************** III. Emails from people trying to fool you into hurting yourself or your friends and coworkers III. 1. jdbg Hoax The bait: An email telling you about a virus and how to remove it. Example: "Subject: "jdbg" Virus: how to detect and remove." May also talk about finding a teddy bear on the machine - because the file has a bear as a symbol. What it is trying to make you do: Remove a file that is not harmful. Labels: Tips |