A week of Cooked Ham and Pork
There is something in the air at the moment. It must be mother’s day, or maybe I’ve just been lucky, but my mail box is chock a block full of SPAM this week. On Gmail I typically get 5-10 per week, now about 500. On my own mail the anti SPAM throws away a few hundred per week, this week about 2000. So I decided to have a dig to see what is actually coming in, where from and what they want.
Description |
Email Origin |
|
|
Greeting card |
Germany |
|
URL Link to exe. 28/33 AV products detected the file, three days ago it was 4. |
Viagra/Cailis Mesages |
Texas |
Mount Laurel (US) |
Links to Canadian Pharmacy web site. |
Viagra/Cailis Meds |
France |
|
Web Site Canadian Healthcare |
Movie downloads |
Argentina |
|
Nothing no links and nothing nasty, maybe a trial run. |
Herbal remedies |
USA |
Oman |
Products to enlarge body parts. The message contained a URL to one of three sites hosted in the same address range. The registrar owns 695 other domains, received 50 of them. |
Lottery* |
UK |
|
So far this week I have won about $500,000,000, not bad for not entering any lotteries. The majority were sent from UK machines, machines at one particular facility. |
Click Fraud |
Spain |
|
The links in the message are ad click redirects. |
Paypal |
US France |
|
The usual phishing exercise aimed at extracting account information. |
I am Lonely Tonight |
Turkey |
|
The usual I’m lonely tonight emails. If you respond it goes into how she wants to travel and can’t you help her out. |
Fake Goods |
Bombay |
Turkey Thailand
|
Fake goods, watches, bags, etc. |
Business Proposal (419 messages) |
US |
Emirates
The Netherlands |
Transfer money and get a percentage. |
Work offers |
Belgium |
|
Work for a few hours per week and make thousands, most of these linked to professional looking sites. Typically they are recruiting for mules. |
Threats |
Turkey |
Russia |
There have been a few variants of these doing the rounds. |
The bulk of the messages received fall in the medical category. There was one lonely-hearts SPAM message, which linked to an executable. Unfortunately the site was already unavailable.
From the setup of the emails and the related sites, about 15 different groups sent the above messages. The typical delivery method is home users, although a number were delivered through mail servers that would allow messages to be relayed.
It is interesting to see that some of the 419 and lottery messages are still doing the rounds. There are obviously still people that fall for the scam.
On the new front there are some new Better Business Bureau messages doing the rounds, so keep your eyes out for those.
Cheers
Mark - Shearwater
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