Mobile Version
Subscribe
Contact Us
About Us
Advertising
Editorial
SC UK
SC Aus/NZ
Home
News
Features
Opinions
Newsletters
Sectors
Company Moves
News Bytes
Products
First Looks
Reviews
Group Tests
About Reviews
Industry Innovators 2008
Blogs
The News Team Blog
The Data Breach Blog
SC Magazine Awards Blog
Buyers Guide
Whitepapers
Jobs
Events
SC Awards
Editorial Webcasts
Vendor Webcasts
Digital Download
eConferences
Podcasts
SC World Congress 2009
Research
Subscribe
Newsletters
Subscribe to SC
Issue Archive
Topic Center:
Financial Services
Health Care
Retail
Government
Compliance
RSS
|
Login
|
Register
Home
>
News
> Latest phishing schemes target Apple
Latest phishing schemes target Apple
Sue Marquette Poremba
May 27, 2008
Print
Email
Reprint
Permissions
Font Size:
A
|
A
|
A
Related Articles
Apple iCal vulnerability offers malware risk
Another Apple QuickTime bug reported
Apple, Mozilla patch browser security problems
Spear-phishing campaigns on the rise
Faster, cheaper iPhone portends IT security headaches
Apple delivers fourth Mac OS X update of year
Mac attacks on rise
Phishing awareness up, anti-spyware unused
Phishing attack on iStockphoto
Massive security updates released for Apple computers
Related Links
Apple
More In News
Fourth of July spam
"Fourth of July" hacker jailed after hospital hack
iPhone hacker reveals SMS vulnerability
Spam increased in Q2, despite 3FN takedown
Rolling Stone magazine hacker arrested
Tags
Email Security
Apple Threats
Phishing
Consumer Threats
Company
Apple, Inc.
Apple
's increasing popularity is leading to the company's users being targeted by phishing schemes, experts say.
Last week, users of Apple's iTunes received messages stating problems with their accounts, but when users responded they were sent to a site asking for personal information such Social Security numbers. And on Saturday, Sunbelt Software's blog posted a screen shot of a phony Apple Store billing page.
The increasing use of Apple in phishing scams is yet another sign of how much the company has grown, Andrew Lochart, vice president of product marketing at email security firm Proofpoint told SCMagazineUS.com on Tuesday.
“The scammers are pretty smart people, and they don't waste their time on scams with companies that aren't widely used,” Lochart said. “It's why you see the big guys
like eBay being used
. There are a large number of people who can be tricked about their account. Apple is at the point now where their corporate identity is useful to the bad guys.”
Lochart also speculated that these phishers are targeting a specific demographic: young adults who have grown up with the internet and have a tendency to engage in risky online behavior, like posting personal information.
“This is something we're going to be watching,” Lochart said. “Is it easier to get younger people to give their personal information?”
Alex Eckelberry, president of anti-spyware company Sunbelt Software said he doesn't think these phishing schemes are that sophisticated.
“I don't think this is specifically targeting Apple, per se,” he told SCMagazineUS.com on Tuesday. “The bad guys are running out of places to phish.”
In his opinion, he added, this is a circular trend.
“There's definitely a trend for Apple, no doubt about it,” he said, “but this is nothing but a hunger for money and looking for new places to find opportunities to get it.”
Apple did not respond to a request for comment.
Most Popular
Most Emailed
Most Recent
Michael Jackson's death exploited by cybercriminals
FTP login credentials at major corporations breached
Juniper pulls researcher's Black Hat ATM talk
FTC settles with "scareware" defendant for $1.9 million
Trojans are fastest-growing data-stealing malware
Britney Spears Twitpic account hacked; fake death posted
Former U.S. cybersecurity chief appointed CEO of ICANN
"Iceman" hacker pleads guilty, faces 60 years
Appellate court affirms that Zango can't sue Kaspersky
Rolling Stone magazine hacker arrested
FTP login credentials at major corporations breached
Juniper pulls researcher's Black Hat ATM talk
FTC settles with "scareware" defendant for $1.9 million
Mozilla Firefox 3.5 officially released
Michael Jackson's death exploited by cybercriminals
Former U.S. cybersecurity chief appointed CEO of ICANN
"Fourth of July" hacker jailed after hospital hack
Rolling Stone magazine hacker arrested
Malicious server used to propagate Zbot shut down
Trojans are fastest-growing data-stealing malware
"Fourth of July" hacker jailed after hospital hack
iPhone hacker reveals SMS vulnerability
Spam increased in Q2, despite 3FN takedown
Hot or not: SCAP is heating up
Rolling Stone magazine hacker arrested
Malicious server used to propagate Zbot shut down
Juniper pulls researcher's Black Hat ATM talk
Mozilla Firefox 3.5 officially released
Appellate court affirms that Zango can't sue Kaspersky
"Iceman" hacker pleads guilty, faces 60 years
Popular Topics
Analyst Reports & Industry Surveys
Anti Spam
Anti Spyware
Anti Virus
Apple Threats
Application Security
Breaches & Exposures
Browser Flaws
Browsers And Security
CAN-SPAM Act
Data Loss Prevention
Endpoint Protection
Facebook
Government
Industry Surveys
Lawbreakers & Cybercrime
Malware
Mobile Endpoint Security
Privacy
Privacy Regulation
Social Networks
Spam
Spam Techniques
Trojans
Vulnerabilities & Flaws
Sponsored Links