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Confirmed Malicious Alerts

PhishMalwareSpamWebserver




· [952725] Moneybookers.com
· [952635] Lloyds TSB, PayPal
· [952320] eBay
· [952306] Lloyds TSB
· [952067] PayPal
· [952024] PayPal
· [951854] Bank of America, PayPal
· [19970] Trojan-Downloader
· [14144] Trojan-Dropper
· [14098] Trojan-Dropper
· [14094] Trojan-Dropper
· [13969] Trojan-Downloader
· [13815] Trojan
· [13807] Trojan-Dropper
· [218693] Canadian Health&Care Mall
· [218671] King Replica
· [217936] VPXL
· [216523] VPXL
· [216136] Canadian Healthcare
· [216072] King Replica
· [215768] ED Pill Store
· [1186] OS Disclosure, RFI Scanner Public, Simple PHP Injection, id Disclosure
· [1102] C99Shell
· [1101] r57shell
· [1017] MyShell
· [892] r57shell
· [863] IRC Bot Shell
· [723] C99Shell
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New Community Posts

MailWasher Pro 6.2.1 Released by Dusty in Mailwasher - Troubleshooting / General on Sep 08, 2008 at 14:03:55
I found it not telling :lol: :lol: :lol: Upgrade went well looks good so far....

Hijack this log that I would like to get reviewed by Maiky in Trend Micro HijackThis Logs on Sep 08, 2008 at 14:02:45
Logfile of Trend Micro HijackThis v2.0.2 Scan saved at 1:55:58 PM, on 9/6/2008 Platform: Windows Vista SP1 (WinNT 6.00.1905) MSIE: Internet Explorer v7.00 (7.00.6001.18000) Boot mode: Normal Ru...

How to avoid Death. A message to the Church. by unhappyone in Religion on Sep 08, 2008 at 14:01:25
At that time in my life, I was very weak. It had nothing to do with a fear of being overcome. I had more to learn before I was certain I was on the right path. I didn't want to lead anyone the way I w...

Bluescreen of Death, winlogon.exe error, & Wireless DSL by Oblivion14 in Trend Micro HijackThis Logs on Sep 08, 2008 at 13:39:44
:oops: Sorry I actually posted the wrong HJT log. When I realized it I had already posted and couldn't edit. Posting again, would invalidate my thread (as it is the rule among these forums, that you m...

log for review by appsense in Trend Micro HijackThis Logs on Sep 08, 2008 at 13:34:55
this is from a friends computer. There is a lot of popup/windows from programs that wants contact with internet (in windows defender), and a lot of programs that wants to install stuff. Had a lot o...

[Forums] [RSS] [ATOM]

image FCC is Warning Companies with filing fees image
General News
Bretbrs writes "

The Federal Communications Commission is warning companies with filing fees due that there may be some phishy stuff going on. The FCC has gotten some complaints, it announced yesterday, that (ahem) "nongovernment entities" have been trying to "misdirect parties" attempting to fork over their fee money.

"The complainants have alleged that these non-government websites are attempting to collect financial information," the Commission's advisory continues. The discovery appears to have been made by the law firm of Fletcher, Heald & Hildreth, which sent out an alert over the weekend.

Fiscal year 2008 FCC fees are due by September 25. The correct site for paying on-line is www.fcc.gov/fees/feefiler.html. The agency's statement doesn't disclose the domains of these possible rogue sites, but says that its Inspector General will look into the matter.

That's a good idea, because the FBI warned at the Federal Trade Commission's 2007 Spam Summit that over 200 government Web sites have been compromised by spammers and phishers, some used to "blast out spam," as an FBI agent explained. Of course, setting up a phony government site isn't as serious a compromise as penetrating the actual site itself (although this will not console fee filers who inadvertently send their credit card numbers to crooks).
Story continues...."
Posted by Ikeb  on Friday, 05 September 2008 @ 04:07:40 UTC (292 reads)
(Read More... | 1641 bytes more | comments? | Score: 0)
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image Work-at-home Web sites settle FTC charges image
General News
Bretbrs writes "

Brothers who operated Web sites promising profits from work-at-home businesses have settled charges that they misled customers with false earnings claims, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission said.

The FTC filed a civil complaint against Eric G. Louie, doing business as Fastcashathome.com, Fastcashathome.homestead.com and Hometypers.com; and Calvin G. Louie, doing business as Moneymakingsecret.homestead.com, Realcashprograms.com, and Dataentrypro.com, in U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, Eastern Division, in November 2006. The six Web sites are no longer operating.

The FTC accused the Louie brothers of inflating earnings potential in work-at-home opportunities involving government grants, mystery shopping, online surveys and data entry.

In the settlement, announced Wednesday, the brothers are barred from further marketing work-at-home opportunities.

The settlement also imposes a US$4.9 million judgment that will be suspended if the brothers surrender assets frozen by the court in 2006; proceeds from the sale of two cars, a Lamborghini and a Ferrari; and any tax refunds for tax years 2005 and 2006. The full judgment will be imposed if they fail to meet the terms of the settlement, or if they are found to have misrepresented their financial condition, the FTC said in a press release.

The Louies charged consumers between $47 and $129 to access Web sites that included “money-making secrets," the FTC said. Their advertised programs either did not exist as represented or did not offer quick and easy money with little time or effort as promised, the agency said.

The case was brought as part of Project Fal$e Hope$, an FTC-led effort that targeted bogus business opportunities and work-at-home scams. The effort has resulted in more than 100 law enforcement actions by the FTC, the I.S. Department of Justice, the U.S. Postal Inspection Service and law enforcement agencies in 11 states.

The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate."
Posted by Ikeb  on Tuesday, 26 August 2008 @ 04:13:15 UTC (749 reads)
(Read More... | 2268 bytes more | comments? | Score: 0)
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image Scammers using Verizon’s name to bilk consumers image
CyberCrime
Bretbrs writes "

Letters from “Verizon Financial” promise $750K
If the thought of Verizon offering to pay you $750,000 sounds too good to be true, that’s because it is.

Verizon today released a statement warning consumers to be on the lookout for shady letters telling them that they have won a special sweepstakes and that a firm named “Verizon Financial” has authorized a payment to them of $750,000. The letters tell consumers that in order to cash in on their prize, they first need to pay a “processing fee” of $3,200. The scammers also include a phony check written in the amount of $4,500 in each “winning” envelope.

The scammers recommend that the sweepstakes “winners” contact a “claims agent,” who Verizon says will try to pry sensitive financial information from the consumer. The company says that it has no connection to any of the sweepstakes letters and recommends that consumers file a report with the United States Postal Inspection Service if they receive one of them.

The bogus Verizon sweepstakes letters aren’t the only scam that has been conducted by Verizon impersonators in recent months. According to the Newnan Times Herald in Georgia, scammers claiming to be representatives of Verizon Wireless are calling residents and offering them a new free Verizon cell phone if they provide the caller with their Social Security number. "
Posted by Ikeb  on Tuesday, 26 August 2008 @ 04:09:27 UTC (250 reads)
(Read More... | 1564 bytes more | comments? | Score: 0)
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image Proposed FBI guidelines allow investigation sans suspicion image
FBI
Bretbrs writes "

Attorney General Michael Mukasey has agreed to postpone implementation of new FBI guidelines, after four Democratic senators raised concerns in a letter Wednesday about proposed changes that they say could permit the FBI to launch investigations of American citizens without any individualized basis for suspicion.


The letter, signed by Sens. Russ Feingold (D-WI), Ted Kennedy (D-MA), Dick Durbin (D-IL), and Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), concerned a draft of the Attorney General's Guidelines governing criminal and intelligence inquiries by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The draft itself has not been made public, though The New York Times reports that the guidelines could be released next month.

The proposed rule change, first reported last week, would loosen restrictions on information sharing between agencies, and allow investigators to begin gathering information for criminal or intelligence purpose, even in the absence of any particularized evidence suggesting that a target is connected to criminal activity.

The senators fear that the new rules "might, for example, permit the FBI to conduct long-term physical surveillance of an innocent American citizen; interview such an individual’s neighbors and professional colleagues, including based on a 'pretext' or misrepresentation; recruit human sources to provide information on that individual; or conduct commercial database searches on that individual—all without any basis for suspicion."

In a speech earlier this month, Mukasey defended the change as a helpful clarification and harmonization of the rules that would better codify existing practices and eliminate "artificial distinctions" between criminal and intelligence inquiries. But Michael German, a former FBI agent now at the American Civil Liberties Union, offered a more skeptical take, calling this characterization a tacit admission that the Bureau had already been ignoring its own guidelines.

Pointing to the case of Stephen Hatfill, whose reputation suffered after he was identified as a "person of interest" in the FBI's investigation into the 2001 anthrax attacks, German said that "opening an investigation against someone has real consequences." While probable cause would still be required to conduct more intrusive searches, German noted that the resources of the FBI could permit it to gather large amounts of nominally "public" information about a target that would be unavailable to a normal private entity. Calling increased reliance on data mining a symptom of "lazy law enforcement," German said that the proposed guidelines are "one more example of the government's failed policies that aren't getting any results, but are eating up a lot of resources and having an affect on innocent people who haven't done anything wrong—it's like a trifecta."

In a response to the senators' concerns addressed to Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-VT), Mukasey agreed not to sign off on the new rules until after mid-September hearings at which FBI Director Robert Mueller will testify. Mukasey set a target date of October 1 for making the guidelines effective.
"
Posted by Ikeb  on Tuesday, 26 August 2008 @ 04:07:18 UTC (729 reads)
(Read More... | 3440 bytes more | comments? | Score: 0)
image

image Nigerian official: image
CyberCrime
Bretbrs writes "

People who fall for so-called Nigerian scams aren't victims at all—in fact, they're greedy and should be jailed, according to Nigerian high commissioner Sunday Olu Agbi. He said today that Nigeria has gained a bad reputation because of the scams perpetrated by a minuscule number of people, and that those who find themselves involved with the scams are equally as guilty as those running them.

The Nigerian Government frowns very seriously on these scams... and every day tries to track down those who are involved, Olu Agbi told the Sydney Morning Herald in response to a previous article on Australians falling for Nigerian scams. People who send their money are as guilty as those who are asking them to send the money.

Out of the 140 million people in Nigeria, Olu Agbi said that fewer than 0.1 percent were involved in Nigerian scams. The scams, also referred to as 419 scams or advance-fee fraud, predate the Internet, but have exploded in recent years thanks to the proliferation of e-mail and instant money transfers. Although the scams can take on many forms—from payments for products sold on eBay or Craigslist, to deposits on houses and purchases of plane tickets for rue love on the other side of the ocean—they all follow the same general theme.

Scammers send huge checks to unsuspecting victims with some story attached to explain the overpayment, and the victim is expected to wire back the difference immediately. Eventually when the checks are deposited, they bounce and the victim is out a lot of money. Sometimes, victims are tricked into thinking they'll eventually be paid back and continue to participate in this endless cycle of sending money, especially if the scammer is wooing them romantically (which happens more commonly than one might think, to both men and women).

Although this kind of fraud originates from all over the world, it seems to have an unusually high concentration in Africa and, specifically, Nigeria. This has, unsurprisingly, cast Nigeria in a negative light. Olu Agbi said that Nigeria's reputation for being involved with the scams has even hurt the country's ability to land business deals. [T]hose who want to transact business with us are always very suspicious, he told the newspaper.

Still, Olu Agbi's "blame the victim" mentality won't help Nigeria win any friends, but education on how to spot 419 scams and avoid falling for them can certainly go a long way in curbing their growth. After all, once victims stop blindly forking over cash, scammers will have to figure out some other way to make money.
"
Posted by Ikeb  on Tuesday, 26 August 2008 @ 04:05:01 UTC (971 reads)
(Read More... | 2862 bytes more | comments? | Score: 0)
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