Phishing Campaign Evades Analysis by Hiding URL in QR Code

  /     /     /  
Publicated : 23/11/2024   Category : security


Phishing Campaign Evades Analysis by Hiding URL in QR Code


Phishing attacks are never really dead.



French researchers at Cofense ran into an attack that has passed from being old to being new again.
Nick Guarino at Cofense
published a blog article
about the firms discovery that a particular phishing campaign actually started with a URL that was encoded inside a QR code. The point of all the convolution was to circumvent any user security software which might analyze or block suspicious or blacklisted domains.
The phishing email poses as a pseudo SharePoint email with the subject line: Review Important Document. The message body invites the victim to: Scan Bar Code To View Document. The only other visible content is a QR code that a curious user may be tempted to scan.
The blog goes on to say that, Most smartphone QR code scanner apps will instantly redirect the user to the malicious website via the phones native browser. In this case the victim would be redirected to a SharePoint branded phishing site. The victim is then confronted with options to sign in with AOL, Microsoft, or Other account services. While this sounds like a simple phish, there is a more nefarious tactic in play: removing the user from the security of a corporate business network.
So, by using the smartphones app to do the QR scanning, the attacker bypasses the corporate security environment. Features such as secure email gateways, link protection services, sandboxes and web content filters no longer matter because the user is now interacting with the phishing site in their own security space: their mobile phone. The landing pages get loaded directly on the victims personal smartphone. It could also be a company-provided mobile device. That might still expose the user to extra risks because of limited security solutions and controls that are implemented on a corporate level.
Attackers even made the malware site seen for Cofense optimized for mobile viewing to keep the victim at ease.
Cofense says that this attack was observed passing through an environment utilizing Symantec Messaging Gateway. When scanned, the message was deemed Not spam by the system.
Carnegie-Mellon has a
seminal report
from 2012 on this sort of attack that it calls QRishing. Not much has changed in the real world since then. The technique still works, especially because most users are completely unfamiliar with the idea that there could be malware hiding in the code. The attackers still like being able to transfer the security battlefield from a laptop to a less-well-defended smartphone.
Dont scan an unknown QR may one day be as ubiquitous as Dont click an unknown link.
— Larry Loeb has written for many of the last centurys major dead tree computer magazines, having been, among other things, a consulting editor for BYTE magazine and senior editor for the launch of WebWeek.

Last News

▸ IoT Devices on Average Have 25 Vulnerabilities ◂
Discovered: 23/12/2024
Category: security

▸ DHS-funded SWAMP scans code for bugs. ◂
Discovered: 23/12/2024
Category: security

▸ Debunking Machine Learning in Security. ◂
Discovered: 23/12/2024
Category: security


Cyber Security Categories
Google Dorks Database
Exploits Vulnerability
Exploit Shellcodes

CVE List
Tools/Apps
News/Aarticles

Phishing Database
Deepfake Detection
Trends/Statistics & Live Infos



Tags:
Phishing Campaign Evades Analysis by Hiding URL in QR Code