New Christmas scam campaign targets shoppers in need of extra cash with bogus loans and credit extensions and tricks them into accessing pages hosting BlackHole exploit kit.
With holidays just around the corner, crooks have already started to poke around for shoppers who want a piece of the online Christmas cheer, but don’t quite have the budget for it.
If you are “short on cash this holiday,” there’s a scammer to let you know that “Holiday cash” can give you the extra money you need “to make Christmas Merry.” Just click a link.
Clicking the link takes users to a page blocked for malicious activity by the Google Safe Browsing diagnostic tool. This particular domain hosted on a server in Russia has a poor reputation and is listed among domains used by attackers to harbor and distribute malware.
This link might be blocked but the Christmas campaigns are at their peak and no one can guarantee the next malicious link won’t dodge security software blacklists or reputation-based mechanisms.
Another scam campaign is addressed to enthusiastic parents who want to send their children “a personalised letter from Santa.” On clicking the inserted link, they are lead to an online survey that can allegedly help them win an iPhone or an iPad. Users are also asked to give away their phone number and send an SMS to a premium-rate number. Bottom line, no one will ever get any personalized item from or with Santa for their child. In fact, none of the on-line questionnaires or the aggressive ads that follow have anything to do with Christmas or Santa.
Crooks also taunt people with bogus announcements according to which users’ “wire transfer was cancelled by the bank”. The link takes them to another webpage known with a bad reputation.
Everybody gets excited around Christmas and might forget about safety when offered big discounts for a wide range of products, such as pharmacy products (read Viagra, diet pills and body cleansing tablets), fake Rolex wrist watches or luxury cars and furniture. And crooks know this and don’t hesitate to take advantage of the unwary Christmas enthusiasts.
Here’s a short list of things users should keep in mind around Christmas shopping seasons:
Safe Christmas shopping, everyone!
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A blend of product manager and journalist with a pinch of e-threat analysis, Loredana writes mostly about malware and spam. She believes that most errors happen between the keyboard and the chair.
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