Friday, 13 August 2010

MAJOR WARNING II

The rise of mobile banking makes us think of greater productivity, speed and convenience. Rarely do we associate this technological advancement with the risks of robbery and bank fraud. But recent news of one of a sophisticated series of cyber attacks has created greater awareness of the rising threat of attacks by “Trojan viruses.”
The Attack

Cybercriminals broke into the accounts of thousands of British Internet banking customers by using a malicious computer program that hides on home computers. The program stole confidential passwords and account details from at least 3,000 individuals. Since the new virus displayed fake bank statements, it succeeded in emptying bank accounts without the owner’s knowledge. Internet security experts estimate at least £675,000 ($869,400) has been illegally transferred from the UK in the last month via the virus.

The Virus

Trojans hide in websites, E-mails or downloads. The latest attack used a Trojan called “Zeus v3,” which hides inside advertisements on legitimate websites. Once installed
on a home computer, the program waits until the person visits his or her online bank. Once this happens, it secretly records their account details and passwords and uses the information to transfer up to £5,000 ($6,440) to other bank accounts.

How to Keep Your Account Safe

You can protect yourself from these threatening viruses by keeping your anti-virus software up to date and keeping your firewalls set to the highest level. Also, avoid opening an E-mail attachments that end in “.exe” (They are ‘executable’ files and can do what they please within your system.) If you think your machine has already been infected, contact your bank immediately. More often than not, your bank will assess whether you are a genuine victim of fraud and will reimburse you.

MAJOR WARNING

Zeus banking virus is back warns security firm

Laptop

Botnets such as Zeus target those using online banking

Zeus, a virus that steals online banking details from infected computer users, is more powerful than ever, warns a web security company.

Trusteer says it has spotted the Trojan virus in one of every 3,000 of the 5.5m computers it monitors in the US and UK.

Zeus 1.6 can infect Windows machines using Firefox and Internet Explorer web browsers, the company claims.

The malware steals login information by recording keystrokes when the infected user is on a list of target websites.

These websites are usually banks and other financial institutions.

The user's data is then sent to a remote server to be used and sold on by cyber-criminals.

"We expect this new version of Zeus to significantly increase fraud losses, since nearly 30% of internet users bank online with Firefox and the infection is growing faster than we have ever seen before," said Amit Klein, chief technology officer at Trusteer.

DIY virus

In March 2010, many parts of the command and control (C&C) system for the Zeus botnet were destroyed when the Kazakhstani ISP that was being used to administer it was cut off.

However, it does not take long for malware controllers to spring up elsewhere, and toolkits for assembling botnets are readily available on the black market.

"There are plenty of opportunities for people to purchase access to these systems through underground chat rooms," said Dr JD Marsters, from the department of electronics and computer science at the University of Southampton.

"It's a game of cat and mouse between anti-virus vendors and botnet developers."

Computer users should ensure that their anti-virus software and operating systems are kept up to date, he advised.

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