Cybercriminals who went after Facebook users with a number of phishing attacks last week have now turned around and begun sending spam messages from the Facebook accounts they cracked.
The social networking site is a prime target for phishers in the past.
Last year, however, Facebook won a $873 million suit against a spammer that was taking advantage of the site’s users.
Some of the spam in the most recent attack contains “run-of-the mill” Viagra-type messages, but some of it is more dangerous, Facebook spokesman Barry Schnitt said Thursday. “Some of it points to a site where users are hit with drive-by downloads of adware,” he said in an e-mail message. “We’ve started blocking all of this spam this morning, have been deleting it, and resetting the passwords of accounts that sent it.”
One of those sites, mygener(dot)im, (do not visit this Web site; it will attack your computer) is loaded with attack code that is used to install malicious programs, said Paul Ferguson, a researcher with antivirus vendor Trend Micro. The site is hosted at a Latvian data center that has been associated with other cybercriminal activity, he said. “My gut feeling is that it’s the same criminal operation that was involved with the Russian Business Network,” he said, alluding to an organized gang of cybercriminals based in Russia.
Attackers have also used the fbaction(dot)net and fbstarter(dot)com domains in their scams, Schnitt said.
Facebook’s 200 million users were hit last week with several rounds of phishing attacks, which tried to trick victims into visiting phoney sites designed to look like Facebook login pages. Users who think they may have fallen victim to one of these attacks are urged to reset their account passwords.
Facebook is disabling accounts that it links to the recent spam attacks, but the company won’t say how many users have been affected, because that would let the bad guys know how effective its security measures have been.
So far it looks like “a relatively small number of users” were phished, Schnitt said. “It is much smaller than previous issues like Koobface, for example,” he added. Koobface was a malicious worm program that spread across Facebook last year, trying to trick victims into downloading malicious code.