Chief executives have been warned to be on their guard against a campaign of
personalised spear phishing attacks.
Reports surfaced last week of emails arriving with
bogus
subpoenas requesting the named chief executive to click on a link purporting
to contain court documents.
The link actually leads to a plug-in that contains a Trojan with the ability
to take over the victim's computer.
The reason this attack is so dangerous is that it is correctly addressed and
identifies the chief executive by name.
European data security firm Norman said that the emails look very realistic
and, unlike many other phishing attempts, use good grammar and spelling.
They contain the correct name of the company, the correct chief executive and
can even contain the correct phone number, misleading the recipients into
following the instructions.
The link, which appears to lead to the American courts, in fact leads to a
server in China, and recipients are asked to install a plug-in to access the
'documents'.
By doing this the victims are in fact installing a Trojan that gives
criminals access to data located on the computer.
The Trojan is installed in form of a digitally signed CAB archive which
extracts a file called 'acrobat.exe'. This file installs 'acrobat.dll' that
gives the Trojan access to all data that passes through the web browser and
Windows Explorer.
Current reports show that an increasing number of chief executives have been
targeted, and that the apparent legitimacy of the document is proving highly
successful for the malware writers.
Trygve Aasland, chief executive at Norman, was one of the recipients. "This
email appears legitimate and the technique is clever in that most people will
want to discover the details of why and by whom they are being sued," he said.
"Fortunately I am very much aware of these attacks and we remained
unaffected. But I can see how others may have been tricked into opening the link
and installing the so-called plug in."
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