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With most of the UK workforce on a well-earned Christmas break, the REC has paid tribute to the temporary more
The recession has inspired sneaky scammers to be even more inventive in getting their hands on our cash. more
GWENT Police are warning people to be vigilant when buying goods online following three reports of fraud more
The largest-ever UK survey of people who've been scammed has just been published more
CONSUMER service chiefs in Fife are urging vulnerable groups, including older people, single parents and low-income families, to be aware of scammers this Christmas. more
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Researchers at several security firms have uncovered a spam campaign targeting Facebook users
Researchers at several security firms have tied the Bredolab Trojan to a spam campaign targeting Facebook users.
The malware is being blasted out by spammers in e-mails claiming to come from “The Facebook Team." Inside the e-mails is a message that the recipient's Facebook password has been changed. In order to get the new one, recipients are told to open the accompanying attachment containing the malware.
Researchers at Websense told eWEEK on 27 Oct that they have observed more than 350,000 of the messages. On the company’s blog, researchers explained that the malware connects to two servers to download additional malicious files. Among them is Pushdo, also known as Cutwail.
"One of the first things we saw this Trojan horse download was the Pushdo bot which began spamming out more of these Facebook password reset emails,” according to M86 Security.
MX Logic noted that Bredolab bypasses firewalls by injecting its own code into the legitimate process svchost.exe and explorer.exe. It also contains anti-sandbox code to thwart researchers, and creates the following files: %AppData%\wiaservg.log,
%Windir%\temp\wpv861256600826.exe and %Programs%\Startup\isqsys32.exe. Bredolab also creates the processes isqsys32.exe and svchost.exe.
Sophos is detecting the malware as Troj/BredoZp-M or Mal/Bredo-A.
"Don't make life easy for the hackers hell-bent on infecting your computer, stealing your identity and emptying your bank account - exercise caution when you receive unsolicited emails and protect your computer with up-to-date security software," Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at Sophos, advised in a blog post.