Technology Today

New research from Proofpoint has revealed that cybercriminals are using social engineering lures related to various coronavirus stimulus packages around the world to trick users into clicking on malicious links or downloading files with malware.One such campaign in the US is targeting US healthcare and higher education organizations as well as companies in the technology industry with emails that contain a message claiming that the Trump administration is considering sending American adults a check to help stimulate the economy.
The email asks recipients to verify their email account through a malicious link that directs them to a phishing page.Another campaign discovered by Proofpoint claims to be sent by a major Australian newspaper and uses the subject line Government announces increased tax benefits in response to the Coronavirus in its emails.
However, the message contains a PDF attachment with an embedded URL that leads to a OneDrive credential phishing page.Proofpoint also observed a small email campaign that targets technology and IT organizations with the subject line COVID 19 Relief Compensation.
The campaign claims to come from the WHO and IMF and says the recipient has been randomly selected to be compensated financially due to the outbreak of the COVID-19 Epidemic outbreak.
Once again though, the email contains a malicious Microsoft Excel branded attachment that steals users' emails and passwords.In addition to the other campaigns Proofpoint discovered, the cybersecurity firm also found two that try and steal users' credit card numbers.The first one is a small email campaign that tries to steal user IDs, passwords and credit card numbers.
It targets information security and technology organizations with the subject line Claim Your Covid-19 Cash.
To help increase its credibility, the campaign claims to come from a major US credit card company and promises to waive late fees and issue a credit of up to $5,000.
The emails sent in the campaign also contain a Claim Now link that takes recipients to a spoofed page for the credit card company that attempts to steal their ID, password, email credit card and other details.The second email campaign is much larger and primarily targets the manufacturing, technology and transportation industries as well as healthcare, aerospace, retail, energy, business services and hospitality companies.
The campaign claims to be from a major UK bank with global customers and also spoofs their branding.
The emails sent out by the cybercriminals behind it have a subject line which reads COVID-19 Relief Measures FINANCIAL SUPPORT WITH and names the bank.To trick users into clicking on a malicious link, the email offers 300 Singapore dollars and tells the recipient to Start Here to claim the money.
However, the link then takes users to a spoofed page for the bank that asks for their name, address and credit card number.In a blog post detailing these various campaigns, the Proofpoint Research Team explains that we will likely see the cybercriminals behind them continue to modify their strategies, saying:The ongoing shift to coronavirus-themed messages and campaigns is truly social engineering at scale and these recent payment-related lures underscore that threat actors are paying attention to new developments.
We anticipate threat actors will continue modifying their strategies as the news surrounding COVID-19 shifts.





Unlimited Portal Access + Monthly Magazine - 12 issues


Contribute US to Start Broadcasting - It's Voluntary!


ADVERTISE


Merchandise (Peace Series)

 


Samsung's best tablet drops to a less expensive rate and it comes with a £& pound; 339 giveaway For a


All Freeview television users given two-day warning and told to follow this new suggestions


All UK Gmail and Yahoo users placed on 'alert' and told to 'follow advice'


'Rare Apple Watch sale convinced me to upgrade my old SE device to one that's £& pound; 100 off'The Apple Watch Series 10 has been cut by £& pound; 100 at Argos, Currys, and Very, it's persuaded me to ditch my slow SE design for it.The Apple W


Tesco app down: Supermarket suffers huge outage as customers left unable to log in


Turn off your Sky TV box now - urgent alert issued to users across the UK


Top Tech: Save £400 on a Samsung Galaxy tablet with shopping expert's deal stack method


Everyone using Chrome needs to inspect their web internet browser now - don't ignore immediate alert


Sky Television down: Thousands not able to see television as service suffers big failure


Google confirms 'biggest' free Android upgrade in years and here's your first look


Sky announces surprise price alert and the exact date when it may affect you


Sky beats Samsung by handing out a £220 freebie with new S25 Edge phones


Amazon vacuum cleaner falls to record-low and branded 'exceptional for the price'


Apple fans can get an iPad for ₤ 10.50 a month as Sky releases brand-new offer


Lesser-known sale cutting cash off Ninja and Shark - however it ends this evening


Everyone with a Gmail account placed on red alert and warned to 'remain vigilant'


Top Tech: Samsung sale cuts Galaxy S25 to record low price as new Edge model drops


Samsung Galaxy S25 Edge pre-orders with official prices and double storage giveaway


'This 30% off power bank has a genius feature that makes it my everyday pick'


Your iPhone just got an important free upgrade from Apple - check your settings now


Your Galaxy S25 just got beaten by a radically new smartphone from Samsung


Gtech cordless vacuum that leaves floors 'pristine' has £100 off


Sky TV and broadband deal is cheapest yet - but it ends in days


All WhatsApp users placed on red alert - delete 'dangerous' new message now


Watch out Sky - brand-new UK rival includes more TV functions and is totally free to enjoy


You may be sorry for buying Samsung's Galaxy S25 after seeing what's coming this week


'Modelling is a human endeavour': Models push back rising of AI in style


Virgin Media issues crucial Wi-Fi recommendations - 5 things you 'need to do' today


'I got an AirTag for the cheapest ever price by stacking a deal most don't know about'