- Threat Encyclopedia
- Spam
A new wave of DRIDEX spam run is seen in the wild. Much like its predecessor, these recent spammed messages pretend as invoice to lure the users in opening the attachment.
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As tax season draws closer, cybercriminals are wasting no time in leveraging it. We recently spotted a DRIDEX-related spam run that pretends to come from United Kingdom’s own agency for collecting taxes, HM Revenue & Customs.
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DRIDEX continues to make waves with yet another invoice spam run. We recently spotted spammed emails supposedly containing an invoice.
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We recently encountered a spam sample that purports itself to be a purchase order from IKEA, which is a famous furniture retailer founded in Sweden and features modern Scandanavian furniture. However, once unsuspecting users or legitimate IKEA customers open the attached .
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We found spammed emails containing details about a compliant regarding a credit card statement that pretends to come from security vendor, Trend Micro. It has an attachment that when users open, a malicious code will run and consequently, infect the system.
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We spotted spam mail with the subject of New Order, claiming that there's an attached invoice for a new order. The spam mail contains a .
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An email poses to be a customer statement for a payment due. The sender asks the receiver to send a payment to settle a December Invoice.
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Subject: Fake Letter-Response email with DRIDEX attachmentDRIDEX is a notorious online banking malware that performs a plethora of information theft routines such as form-grabbing, HTML injections, and clickshot taking among others. We recently spotted a spam run that comes with DRIDEX malware.
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We spotted spam emails laden with DRIDEX malware that pretends to come from a British gas company. Unsuspecting users who opened the email will see an attached Word document file that has malicious macro detected by Trend Micro as W2KM_DRIDEX.
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As the world mourns the death of rock star icon David Bowie, cybercriminals are quick to leverage this tragic news for their social engineering ploys. Unlike spam runs where one can immediately see such lures in the email subject or attachment, this spam email use hidden keywords about David Bowie in the email’s code.
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