Industry


Ads by TechWords

See your link here


Dan Tynan's picture
Dan Tynan

Culture Crash

Twitter phishing scams: Not so tweet

No matter how nice your Net neighborhood is, eventually the scum of the earth will move in next door. And so it goes with Twitter.

The Twitteratti are all atwitter about a phishing scam that hit over the weekend. The phishing tweets came in the form of direct messages - essentially private texts only Twitter friends can send and only you can see. Typically the message says something like "Hey, check out this funny blog about you" with a URL attached. The link takes you to a site that looks exactly like the Twitter log in, only the address is twitter.access-logins.com/login/.

Twitter fake log on page

If you fall for the trap and log in, they're off to the races with your Twitter name and password.

What good are Twitter log ons and passwords to your average dirtbag? As with email addresses and spam, the phishing scammers can use your identity to send tweets to your friends in order to drive them to Web sites. (The idea being that you'd trust people you know more than total strangers.) They might collect a few pennies from the site owner for each visitor, or the site could do a drive-by install of malware and absorb your machine into a bot network.

(If you use Internet Explorer and haven't updated lately, now would be a good time - it's particularly vulnerable to this kind of attack. Microsoft issued an emergency patch to fix it roughly two weeks ago.)

The solution, per the Twitter blog, is simple. Don't log in. And if you suspect that your profile has already been stolen, use Twitter's 'reset password link,' which will send an email to the address on your account so you can conjure up a new password.

A second, unrelated scam demonstrates why evildoers would target Twitter users. As reported by the Threat Chaos blog, someone created at least 16 fake Twitter profiles attached to pictures of pretty women. All lead to the same Web site for a term life insurance broker in Charlotte, North Carolina, which serves up all the various reasons why you need term life insurance, even if you really don't. (Twitter has since nixed these phony accounts.)

As spam declines in effectiveness, scammers seek new ways to reach suckers. Twitter is now it. Next week it will be something else.

But what this means is Twitter has now officially emerged from its trust bubble. You can no longer innocently follow a link because some quasi-stranger tweeted it to you without being wary -- which means people will follow fewer and fewer links, making Twitter less and less effective.

But "Twitter phishing scam" is too clumsy a phrase. We need a new portmanteau. Twishing? Twitphishing? Something like that. Because this is far from the last we will see of this scam.

Have you been Twished? Post your thoughts below or email them to me: dan (at) dantynan (dot) com.

Dan Tynan tweets too much (and yet, not enough). When not wrestling with paradoxes he tends his blogs, Culture Crash and Tynan on Tech.

What People Are Saying

Verify Redirect Firefox Addon

Hi,

I developed an add-on for Firefox that would allow users to be notified where a link they click will redirect them too. This is specially useful for finding out where a URL shortened link will eventually take you. Check it out at http://code.google.com/p/verifyredirectaddon/, from there you can click a link to AMO if you wish to download it from there. It is still in its infancy, but I feel it's a pretty good band-aid for what's become a big security issue. I would appreciate user feedback.

Please do not create a new

Please do not create a new term for these latest phishing scams. Phishing is phishing. We technogeeks lose our credibility when we speak a different language than the general public. We have have had some success in the security awareness arena as we educate the public about phishing. Let's not muddy the waters.

I have no sympathy for

I have no sympathy for phishing victims. The internet is a big, scary place. If you enter it without knowing how to protect yourself, you're just asking for trouble.

Slashdot is suggesting

Slashdot is suggesting phitting, but I like the sound of pheeting, or phweeting -- since a tweet is the mode of delivery.

It's pishing

Pishing is the word for imitating bird calls in order to get birds to chirp back. It's perfect for twitter based phishing.

I suggest calling it

I suggest calling it twatting. Rhymes with swatting.

How does this relate to

How does this relate to Phishing?

it smells like phish.

it smells like phish.

RE: How does this relate to phishing?

It is phishing. Not financial phishing, but what is now most commonly called credential phishing and what was (in some quarters) called .edu phishing early in 2008 when it became a big problem.

It was called .edu phishing because the first big and noticeable targets of this were .edu domains. From there it quickly expanded to target ISPs, free webmail providers, and just about any place with a login and userid that could be used to send mail. The main reason? To hijack the good reputation of the outbound mailhosts at those domains to send spam.

And if anybody tries to come up with some other cutesy name for this just because Twitter is the target (the first four letters say it all, BTW), I think I'll have to choke them. It's just credential phishing. Nothing to see here, folks. Move along, move along.

It's worse than that

Twitter links are generally TinyURLs, so you can't generally see if a link even appears legit until you click on it. This is ripe for abuse, and twitter should do something to help prevent it, at least by using

http://preview.tinyurl.com

instead of

http://tinyurl.com

for their auto-generated links.