| Facebook used by cyber-crooks to help drive the rogue anti-malware business |
| Press Releases | |||
| Thursday, 14 May 2009 17:02 | |||
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Madrid, May 13, 2009- Variant number 56 of the Boface family of worms has just appeared. Each of these variants has been designed especially to use Facebook to distribute and download malware. This is largely due to the enormous global popularity of this social network and the potential it offers for reaching numerous users. The BJ variant in particular uses Facebook to download and install rogue anti-malware and trick users into believing they are infected and consequently buy a fake antivirus.
![]() The number of infections observed for this type of malware since August, indicates an exponential growth rate as high as 1,200%, comparing April 2009 with August 2008. The rogue anti-malware business is one of the most prolific cyber crime activities, with respect to the number of examples in circulation. PandaLabs forecast quarterly growth of more than 100% for the current year. The new Boface.BJ worm reaches computers in several ways: email messages with attachments, Internet downloads, files transferred via FTP, IRC channels, P2P file-sharing networks, etc. Users are infected without realizing. Once the computer has been infected, the worm takes four hours to kick into action. And it does this once infected users have entered their Facebook accounts. In that moment, it sends a message to the entire network of friends, including the infected user. Picture at: http://www.flickr.com/photos/panda_security/3528707512/ Anyone clicking on the link in the message will be taken to a fake YouTube page (called “YuoTube”): http://www.flickr.com/photos/panda_security/3527896167/ where they will supposedly be able to see a video. However, they will first be prompted to download a media player. If the user accepts, the fake antivirus will be immediately downloaded. From the moment it is installed, this malware will launch messages claiming that the computer is infected and that the user must buy a solution. Specifically, one of the fake antivirus products displayed in this interface: http://www.flickr.com/photos/panda_security/3528707634/ Given the viral nature of Facebook networks, it is fair to assume that this message will spread exponentially leading to very high infection rates. According to Corrons: “Users of social networks like this normally trust the messages they receive, so the number of reads and clicks is often very high. Clearly, in addition to the security measures of the social network itself, users have to take on board certain security and personal privacy basics, to avoid falling victim to fraud and contributing to its propagation”. To prevent this type of fraud, PandaLabs offers the following advice:
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