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Phishing
Escaping the phishing net
Phishing continues to be one of the rapidly
growing classes of identity theft scams on the Internet. It can be
curbed with a blend of technology, policy guidelines and user
awareness, writes Nivedan Prakash
Phishing has become a serious problem in India.
Leading banks, or rather their depositors, have been targeted over
the past year and the biggest challenge faced is the lack of
awareness that Indian Net banking users have about such fraudulent
practices. This lets phishers lay their traps and scam ignorant Net
banking users. With the success rate being high, phishing attacks
have multiplied and become more refined.
These attacks are sophisticated and are not
limited to obtaining user account details, but also include access
to all personal and financial data. Initially recipients were
prompted to reply to e-mails for password and credit card details,
and recent attacks have involved fake Web sites, the installation of
Trojan-horse key-loggers, screen capture programs, and
man-in-the-middle data proxies all of which have been delivered
through that most ubiquitous of applications—e-mail.
Symantec observed 87,963 phishing Web site hosts
during the second half of 2007. This was an increase of 167% from
the first half of 2007, when the company detected 32,939 phishing
Web site hosts. Between the second half of 2006, when 13,353
phishing Web site hosts were detected, and the second half of 2007,
Symantec observed a dramatic increase of 559% in phishing Web site
hosts.
According to the Gartner Group, victims of
phishing attacks are three times more likely to suffer some form of
identity theft than the general population. Meanwhile, attempts to
deal with the growing number of reported phishing incidents include
legislation, user training, public awareness, and technical
measures. However, despite advanced filtering, better law
enforcement, greater efforts at user education, and other measures,
reports of phishing have not declined.
Mitigating the threat posed by phishing requires a
layered approach to Internet and communications security. Employing
a combination of solutions-based, policy-based and behavioral-based
controls can drastically reduce organizational vulnerabilities. As
security is a never-ending race against threats, it is important to
analyze existing security infrastructure on a regular basis.
However, threats are dynamic and evolutionary. The minute one is
dealt with, another emerges to take its place.

Current scenario
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"The
trend is towards targeting some brands with an intention of
financial gain"
- Mahesh
Gupta Business Development Manager, Network
Security, Cisco
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"In the
last six months of 2007, Symantec observed 345 unique phishing
URLs with IP addresses hosted in India. We have also observed
more than 400 unique phishing attacks on reputable Indian
banks"
- Prabhat Kumar
Singh Director-Symantec Response Lab |
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"Customers should also be aware of e-mail messages
that ask for account information such as login ids, PIN
details, card details, and ensure that e-mail received is
digitally signed to be sure that the mail has come from a
genuine source"
- Srinivas
Sripada Vice-president, Quality, Perot
Systems |
It is known fact that India, along with other
developing nations, is being targeted by the practitioners of
phishing. Unsuspecting users have fallen prey to phishers due to the
adoption of new social engineering approaches being adopted by them.
Nowadays, users are asked to fill out survey forms
for a particular financial institution and promised a reward such as
a holiday with a resort, which will require the victims to fill out
personal information. Once this information is given away, the
phishers have a field day. Some phishing mails lure users with a
handsome lottery prize and to claim it the user needs to provide a
personal account number for funds transfer. Instead of money flowing
in your account, it flows out.
Commenting on the current trends in phishing,
Akshay Garkel, Senior Consultant, Professional Services, Datacraft
Asia, said, “As per CERT-IN, a total of 392 phishing incidents were
reported by various national and international agencies during 2007.
The threat has taken an upward toll in terms of the number of
incidents reported in the year 2008. 27% of the attacks reported to
CERT-IN have been phishing attacks.”
Phishing trends are in the form of online identity
theft using both social engineering and technical tricks to steal
personal identity and financial account credentials. For example,
technical tricks are used to plant crimeware onto PCs to steal
credentials directly, often using key-logging systems to intercept
consumers’ online account user names and passwords, and to corrupt
local and remote navigational infrastructures to misdirect consumers
to fake Web sites and away from the real Web sites.
Samuel Sathyajith, Country Manager-India and
SAARC, Arbor Networks, said, “The techniques used for phishing have
changed little but their distribution and sophistication in
deployment have changed greatly. Phishers are using botnets as a
primary method of distribution as well as to host collection Web
sites. The use of botnets allows phishing sites to constantly move
which makes them more difficult to trace.”
“Online fraud is evolving. Phishing and pharming
represent one of the most sophisticated, organized and innovative
technological crime waves faced by online businesses. Fraudsters
have new tools at their disposal; and are able to adapt more rapidly
than ever,” added Amuleek Bijral, Country Manager, India and SAARC,
RSA.
Symantec has observed many phishing trends during
the second half of 2007, the majority of brands targeted by phishing
attacks were in the financial services sector, accounting for 80% of
the total. The financial services sector also accounted for the
highest volume of phishing Web sites during this period, at 66%,
down slightly from 72% in the first half of 2007. Since most
phishing activity pursues financial gain, successful attacks using
brands in this sector are likely to yield profitable data, such as
bank account credentials, making this sector an obvious focus for
attacks.
Surendra Singh, Regional Director, India and
SAARC, Websense, pointed out, “Phishing is becoming more
sophisticated in the sense that it capitalizes on various high
profile events/places/people to lure users into clicking a link or
visiting a malicious Web site. For example, take the China
earthquake donation phishing attack, where Websense Security Labs
discovered phishing attacks that targeted donors to victims of the
recent earthquake in China. The phishing site posed as a
representative of the Red Cross and provided multiple bank account
numbers for donors to wire their donations to.”
Mahesh Gupta, Business Development Manager,
Network Security, Cisco, said, “The trends are more towards
targeting some brands with the financial gain intent. These days the
phishing sites are posted on a shared domain and their lifetime
which earlier was 6-7 days now has shrunk to a couple of days.”
Other trends
Phishing attacks have crossed the boundaries of
e-mail and have targeted an easier option—the telephone. As users
have realized the ill effects of phishing, they have taken
precautions to safeguard themselves. This is the reason why phishers
have opted for phone phishing, as after the Internet, it is the
second largest mode of communication.
Phone phishing is a way where a user can call a
number and give away vital information such as credit card numbers.
For example, due to irregularities on a credit card account, you may
receive a voice mail asking you to call your bank at the telephone
number mentioned in the voice message. On calling, if you follow the
prompts on the IVR you will end up giving your credit card number
ostensibly for verification. Once you do that, your number has been
captured and is ripe for misuse. Even phone banking is no longer
secure thanks to scams like these.
The technique to protect yourself from phone
phishing is the same as one would use online—keep confidential
information secret. The best advice, short of not responding at all,
is to simply say that you are not interested and to hang up. You can
then independently contact (by using the printed number from your
statement) your bank to see if the information is needed for a
legitimate reason.
Voice over IP is rapidly becoming standard for
many enterprises as well as home users. This has made the automation
of soliciting homes for fraud purposes such as phone phishing, or
Vishing, quite a bit more simple. This trend is a challenge to
traditional systems that look for Web-based phishing threats.
Vishing is really a new and separate type of threat and is targeting
an area (VoIP) that traditional security tools do not address.
Vishing basically uses social engineering
techniques and Voice over IP (VoIP) to gain access to private
personal and financial information from the public for the purpose
of financial reward. The term is a combination of voice and
phishing. Vishing exploits the public’s trust in landline telephone
services, which have traditionally terminated in physical locations
which are known to the telephone company, and associated with a
bill-payer. The victim is often unaware that VoIP allows for caller
ID spoofing, inexpensive, complex automated systems and anonymity
for the bill-payer. Vishing is typically used to steal credit card
numbers or other information used in identity theft schemes from
individuals.
Chudasama pointed out, “Malicious hackers are
turning to Net phone systems in a bid to trick people into handing
over personal details. Security firms have identified several scams
in which Net phone systems are harnessed to try to catch out
potential victims by convincing people to hand over useful details
such as credit card numbers, bank account details or personal
information. The scam has been dubbed ‘Vishing’ because, like
phishing, its practitioners pose as banks and other financial
institutions but use Voice over IP (VoIP) technology.”
The industry experts are also pointing towards
another trend, called ‘Spear phishing’, which is a technique whereby
e-mails that appear genuine are sent to all the employees or members
within a certain company, government agency, organization, or group.
Much like a standard phishing e-mail, the message might look like it
comes from an employer, or from a colleague who might send an e-mail
message to everyone in the company, in an attempt to gain login
information. Spear phishing scams work to gain access to a company’s
entire computer system.
Extent of damage
The financial impact/damage that phishing attack
can do to financial institutions and e-commerce sites can amount to
millions of dollars. A phishing attack hurts consumers as well as
businesses. Data theft threats against businesses cause hundreds of
millions of dollars in monetary damage, and they hurt customer
confidence to boot. Brand damage can also cause businesses to hide
data theft attacks making it hard to quantify the true impact of
this phenomenon.
Digvijaysinh Chudasama, VP-Sales, Cyberoam India,
commented, “Indirect losses are much higher, including customer
service expenses, account replacement costs, and higher expenses due
to decreased use of online services in the face of widespread fears
about the security of online financial transactions. Phishing also
causes substantial hardship for victimized consumers, due to the
difficulty of repairing credit damaged by fraudulent activity. They
can curb phishing attacks by educating users about safe Internet
usage and awareness programs on possible phishing attacks and how to
be safe on the Internet.”
The impact of a phishing attack on any financial
institutions and e-commerce site can vary depending on the
intensity/impact of the attack. The impact can be—direct financial
loss to the organization; threat to integrity by actually having the
clients shying away from the site (Internet banking or e-commerce
site); easy incentive for cross border crimes; tracing the attacker
back can be difficult and next-to-impossible to prove to the cyber
law cell or in a court of law. This may also lead to difficulty in
claiming insurance due to data theft.
Ambarish Deshpande, Regional Director, India and
SAARC, IronPort Systems, stated, “Ultimately, phishing reduces the
target audience’s willingness to enter financial data into [the
online portals] of commercial entities. There is less willingness to
transact online, and the online transaction model is most profitable
for business.”
Damage caused by phishing ranges from denial of
access to substantial financial loss. This style of identity theft
is becoming more popular, because of the readiness with which
unsuspecting people often divulge personal information to the
phisher, including credit card and social security numbers. There
are also fears that identity thieves can add such information to the
knowledge they gain simply by accessing public records. Once this
information is acquired, the phisher may use a person’s details to
create fake accounts in a victim’s name. They can then ruin the
victims’ credit or even deny victims access to their own accounts.
Deepak Thakur, Senior Research Analyst, ICT
Practice, Frost & Sullivan, South Asia and Middle East, pointed
out, “Online banking, online shopping, e-commerce or any
e-transaction comes under direct threat of phishing. An individual
would not be aware if he has lost money till he checks his account
and the loss could be huge. This severely affects the trust factor
of the user over the online service provided by the institution for
convenience. This experience spreads mistrust on such services
directly hampering the business of financial institutions and
e-commerce.”
Adding to it, Prabhat Kumar Singh,
Director–Symantec Response Lab, explained, “Banks are one of the
sensitive organizations that are watched closely by hackers.
Phishing in banking organization has helped hackers gain
financially. In the last six months of 2007, Symantec observed 345
unique phishing URLs with IP addresses hosted in India. Symantec
also observed more than 400 unique phishing attacks on reputable
Indian banks. Out of these, some of the attacks involved the use of
compromised ‘.gov’ servers to launch phishing attacks on other
brands.”
Here we will also look at the some of the cases
where Indian banks and other enterprises that have fallen victim to
phishing attacks. According to a new survey conducted by
Singapore-headquartered software product company, ReadiMinds, around
30% of India’s top banks have fallen victim to identity theft in the
last one year. There have been reports of phishing incidents on
India’s large state-owned banks like the State Bank of India and
large private banks like ICICI Bank and UTI Bank, in recent past. As
per the findings of UTI Bank’s security department, the phishers
have sent more that 1,00,000 e-mails to account holders of UTI Bank
as well as other banks.
On January 4, 2008 and January 10, 2008, top
banking organizations HDFC and ICICI were targets of phishing
attacks in which e-mails were directed to users that said the banks
were updating their online security mechanism, so the user should
key-in his banking information in the Web site that the fake e-mail
led them to. Considering that ‘phishing’ was pretty much unheard of
in India a few years back, this frequency is something to be
concerned about.
“In 2005, there were only two banks which were
attacked in India. This number increased to 12 banks being attacked
during 2006-2007. In September-October 2006, India was among the top
10 countries hosting phishing sites. Financial services was the most
targeted industry sector accounting for 91.5% of all attacks in the
month of September 2006,” commented Singh from Websense.
Conceding that phishing has targeted almost every
bank and other such institutes in India, including ICICI, HDFC or
HSBC banks, Vijay Merchant, VP-Marketing, Micro Technologies, added,
“Recently, ICICI lodged a complaint against phishing. A customer had
complained about an irrelevant inquiry about account details and
when the police looked into the case it was found to be a case of
phishing.”
Apart from these, industry experts are seeing a
shift of phishing targets—from high profile big brands like Citicorp
or eTrade to community banks and smaller financial institution which
spent way less in customer education and anti-phishing protection.
Their users would be an easier target as well.
Anti-phishing solutions
All employees of an organization who utilize the
Internet are susceptible to phishing attacks. Enterprises require an
integrated Web security solution that provides employees and
organizations protection from phishing and fraud-based attacks.
Phishing threats can be mitigated by blocking access to phishers’
malicious Web sites, thereby rendering the phishing attack harmless.
Integrated Web security solutions need to be deployed that prevent
spyware, malicious mobile code, and other Web-based threats,
key-logger, back-channel transmissions, etc., to host sites.
Enterprises also need to protect employees from
phishing and pharming, and control the sending and receiving of
instant messaging attachments. A real-time security update is
essential for immediate protection from new security threats with
reporting and analysis that provide organizations with information
on user access to fraudulent sites or vulnerability to malicious
code.
Govind Rammurthy, CEO and MD, MicroWorld, said,
“Anti-phishing solutions such as, blacklisting phishing Web sites,
blacklisting mails from unknown phishers, maintaining a database of
blacklisted phishing Web sites are proving effective. On the other
hand, network intrusion and anti-hacking devices need to be
installed on the Web server along with software that authenticates
the domain from which mails are sent.”
As the security industry has recognized the
shortcomings of its different solutions, a new generation of
security solutions is shipping with promises of broad visibility and
control. These new tools shift the protection emphasis from guarding
enterprise infrastructure from inbound attacks—a model suited to
perimeter boundaries and the Internet as a content resource—to
guarding essential information from outbound data loss, in tune with
Web 2.0 and the Internet as a business platform.
Edwin Christopher, Security Analyst,
SecureSynergy, added, “We have an anti-phishing solution called TPS
that stands for Total Protection Service, which includes anti-virus,
anti-spyware, desktop firewall and browser protection. This managed
service is provided by SecureSynergy from an ISO 27001 certified
NOC.”
Phishing cannot be handled by a technology
solution alone. Solution can be achieved by the right blend of
technology, policy guidelines and user awareness. A two-pronged
approach to stopping these attacks has also worked best. Stopping
consumers who might be visiting fraudulent sites as well as blocking
botnet communications, which often serve as the distribution method
for these attacks can help solve the problem.
Raghu Raman, CEO, Mahindra Special Services Group,
added, “I believe technology-based as well as pattern-analytic
solutions would prove effective in curbing phishing attacks. I guess
the most powerful tool is ‘education’, wherein the banks and other
financial institutions need to educate their customers on computer
security so that they would be aware what a phishing Web site is and
how do they tackle it. It is essentially to change the whole
behavior of the users.”
Besides anti-phishing solutions, users need to
follow certain guidelines that would protect them from phishing
thefts. As pointed out by Srinivas Sripada, Vice-president, Quality,
Perot Systems, “There should be user level awareness of not sharing
confidential data, users must avoid banking at cyber cafes, giving
away card and account details, not replying to unknown mails, being
aware of spoofed e-mails and spam mails. Customers should also be
aware of e-mail messages that ask for account information such as
login ids, PIN details, card details, and ensure e-mails received is
digitally signed to be sure that the mail has come from a genuine
source.”
nivedan.prakash@expressindia.com
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