Regional News: Boston | D.C.| New York | Silicon ValleyMore Tech News:Newslinx
BusinessDeveloperEcommerceenterpriseNetworkingSecurity
StorageWirelessxspspecialstatsCommentary
you are in:
internetnews.comStats
7 day summary

internet.com


internet.commerce
Be a Commerce Partner
Help Desks
Pens
2007 New Cars
Greeting Cards
KVM over IP
GPS
Web Hosting Providers
KVM Switches
Auto Insurance Quote
Send Files Up To 10GB
Boat Donations
Giveaways
Special Ed Masters
Laptop Computers

Newsletter Signup

Internet Daily

InternetNews Business Report

Boston News

DC News

NY News

SiliconValley News

select a newsletter above, type your email and click the arrow to sign up!

internet.com
Developer
International
Internet Lists
Internet News
Internet Resources
IT
Linux/Open Source
Personal Technology
Small Business
Windows Technology
xSP Resources
Search internet.com
Advertise
Corporate Info
Newsletters
Tech Jobs
E-mail Offers

Can You Spot The Phish Attack?
Symantec Lands Anti-Phish Firm
Cyber Criminals Turn to Home Users
McAfee SiteAdvisor Bugs Out
For more stories on:
stats
Greynets Getting Greyer
How Fast Will They Flock to Vista?
Scammers Hooking Bigger Phish
Social Networks In For a Big 2007?
Will iPod Owners Swoon For Zune?
Microsoft's Counterfeit Auction Dragnet
Search Engines Power Help With Health
Online TV Gaining Market Share
Retail Gives E-Commerce a Q3 Pop
U.S. Leads World in Child-Abuse Sites
Resource Guide: The Five Essentials of Customer Experience Management. A recent survey revealed that 89% of consumers had transaction problems online. 34% of those customers left the site. Stop losing customers & revenue.

Stats
November 9, 2006
Scammers Hooking Bigger Phish

Business is good for phishers.

The size of their average catch increased almost five-fold, from $257 per victim last year to $1,244 in 2006.

According to Gartner analyst Avivah Litan, this is happening because scammers are identifying higher-income targets, moving their phishing sites more frequently and switching up the types of business they try to impersonate.

Victims click on links they receive in the body of e-mails -- and, increasingly, in instant messages -- from sites purporting to be legitimate businesses like financial institutions, e-commerce and auction sites.

Approximately 109 million U.S. adults have received phishing e-mail attacks, up from 57 million in 2004, according to Gartner.

Total loses from phishing attacks have risen to $2.8 billion in 2006, twice the amount lost in 2004.

According to the survey, conducted by Gartner analysts in August of this year, adults earning more than $100,000 per year are attacked more often than those making less.

This group reported receiving an average of 112 phishing e-mails in 2006, versus 74 e-mails per consumers across all income brackets.

On average, the high-income adults lost $4,362, almost four times as much as other victims.

According to Litan, cyber criminals have done a better job of identifying high-income individuals.

They sell each other credit card numbers in online chat rooms, and can identify credit cards with higher spending limits by the first six digits on the card.

They also get their hands on more promising lists, such as brokerage customers, figuring that those people are likely to have a high net worth.

Attackers also intercept the names of consumers participating in auctions for high-ticket items, such as cars.

Typically, the phishers wait until the end of an auction and then inform all the losers that they in fact won, getting them to send money for something they'll never get.

Banks and credit card companies tend to have liberal refund policies in order to maintain consumer confidence, Litan noted.

Nevertheless, the average amount of money consumers recovered after being victimized dropped from 80 percent in 2005 to just 54 percent in 2006.

Phishers are also moving from site to site more frequently, which means they can't be shut down as easily.

"The average life of phishing sites has gone from one week a couple of years ago to about one hour in 2006," said Litan.

"Within a year or so, phishing sites may be user-specific -- a single site will be set up to launch a phishing attack against a single user," she predicted.

"It's no wonder the detection services can't keep up with these rapid criminal movements."

Indeed, Litan told internetnews.com that consumer sites like eBay (Quote) and PayPal, which are increasingly the foils for phishing scams, haven't been able to keep up with the crooks despite their best efforts.

"Nothing is working for them."

Litan said the solution is to improve security within the browser combined with the use of whitelists and other secure certificates on the server side, such as PKI (define).

Vendor groups such as the CA/Browser Forum have begun developing higher-level secure certificates to offer legitimate businesses.

The certificates work in conjunction with modern browsers to alert users when a site is a suspected fraud.

For an example of how this would work, security software vendor Verisign (Quote) shows a screen shot of an address bar on a background that is green because the user has gone to a verified site.

McAfee rolled out an application earlier this week alerting users if they are about to visit an untrustworthy site.

Litan said vendors should take advantage of the fact that the infrastructure already exists to improve security on the Internet.

"The designers of the Internet did a great job. The hooks are all there, they just need to be utilized."


Stats Archives

7 day summary

Receive news via our XML/RSS feed


Add internetnews.com to your browser search box.
IE 7 | Firefox 2.0 | Firefox 1.5.x


recent headlines
Stats News
Spot-Swap Among The World's Fastest Supercomputers
Greynets Getting Greyer
How Fast Will They Flock to Vista?
Scammers Hooking Bigger Phish
Social Networks In For a Big 2007?
More News...
Top Stories
Congress Urged to Extend R&R; Tax Credit
Traders Cheer Inflation Data
More Than Second Life in IBM's $100M Spend
Microsoft Issues Monthly Fixes
Embedding Eclipse Once, Enriching Many Apps
More News...


Contact internetnews.com staff


JupiterWeb networks:

internet.comearthweb.comDevx.comGraphics.com

Search JupiterWeb:

Jupitermedia Corporation has two divisions: Jupiterimages and JupiterWeb

Jupitermedia Corporate Info


Legal Notices, Licensing, Reprints, & Permissions, Privacy Policy.

Web Hosting | Newsletters | Tech Jobs | Shopping | E-mail Offers