User: Pass: Forget password? / Register New User 
Current issue Current issue | Forum and Community Forum & Community | Onekit's Software OneKit's Software | Submit software (submit PAD file) Submit software
home | links | about / contact us
Games Graphics & Design MP3 & Audio Internet & Networks System & Utilities Home & Education Business WebDev SoftDev
Reviews & Articles :: Phishing Attack Targets MySpace Users
Issue: October 2006 > Internet & Networks > Article "Phishing Attack Targets MySpace Users"

Phishing Attack Targets MySpace Users (Phishing Attack Targets MySpace Users)  Phishing Attack Targets MySpace Users

Internet & Networks
Advertisement on Onekit.com Software Magazine
Attackers have found a way to use a genuine MySpace account to trick users into disclosing passwords.

Reports today indicate that a MySpace user was e-mailing potential victims inviting them to visit a fraudulent log-in page, where they were asked to enter their e-mail address and password. That information was then sent to a server located in France, according to Netcraft, a Web analysis firm that reported the problem.

The attack, which was shut down by MySpace around 10 a.m. Pacific this morning took advantage of the way MySpace organizes URLs in order to give the fake log-in page a believable Web address, something that could confuse even security-conscious users, according to Netcraft analyst Rich Miller.



Fake Login Page

The attacker had registered a MySpace account named login_home_index_html, meaning that the MySpace page hosting the fake login, looked like a legitimate place where users would sign on to the service.

Users visitng the page would see a legitimate MySpace URL but would not necessarily realize that it was, in fact, a MySpace user page that had been configured to trick them into entering their passwords and e-mail addresses.



Stay Safe

This type of attack is not unprecedented, but it does show, "one more interesting way that phishers are trying to trick people out of their account details," Miller said.

Typically, sites like MySpace have a database of user names that are off-limits, in order to prevent this type of attack, Miller said. "What this kind of attack suggests is that sites have to expand that list."

MySpace is owned by News Corp. A News Corp. spokeswoman said that users who are unsure about whether they're at the right log-in page should go to the main address.


Related Links:
October 28, 2006
Author: Robert McMillan
There are no users' comments | Post your comment
Copyright 2003-2008 - Software Magazine, onekit.com, Legal Notices

You can help improve OneKIT and boomerang will come back.
Advertisement Advertisement
Sponsored links: Shareware downloads | Hard Drive Recovery | Firevector