Hackers Found Phishing for Facebook Credentials
A "very realistic-looking" login prompt is designed to capture users' Facebook credentials, researchers report.
A recently spotted phishing campaign is seemingly intended to steal victims' Facebook login credentials with a fake pop-up prompt designed to look like a legitimate login portal.
Researchers with Myki, a password management company, were alerted to the threat when users complained the tool wasn't auto-completing passwords on popular websites as usual. Upon investigation, the researchers began to think users were being deceived via malicious websites.
"The attack is based on the concept of being able to reproduce a social login prompt in a very realistic format inside an HTML block," says Myki co-founder and CEO Antoine Vincent Jebara. The status bar, navigation bar, shadows, and content are reproduced to look like a real prompt.
When victims visit a malicious site, they are asked to authenticate using a social media account – in this case, Facebook. When they choose a login method, the site displays a fake login prompt. Users who fill in their credentials will automatically send their information to attackers.
Jebara recommends a quick check to test for fraudulent pop-up windows: Try to drag the pop-up away from the window it is displayed in, he advises. If dragging it out fails and part of the pop-up disappears beyond the edge of the window, it's a sign the pop-up is fake.
Read more details here.
Join Dark Reading LIVE for two cybersecurity summits at Interop 2019. Learn from the industry's most knowledgeable IT security experts. Check out the Interop agenda here.
About the Author
You May Also Like
Applying the Principle of Least Privilege to the Cloud
Nov 18, 2024The Right Way to Use Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning in Incident Response
Nov 20, 2024Safeguarding GitHub Data to Fuel Web Innovation
Nov 21, 2024The Unreasonable Effectiveness of Inside Out Attack Surface Management
Dec 4, 2024