Victims risk AsyncRAT infection after being redirected to fake Booking.com sites


Cybercriminals have started a campaign of redirecting links placed on gaming sites and social media—and as sponsored ads—that lead to fake websites posing as Booking.com.

According to Malwarebytes research, 40% of people book travel through a general online search, creating a lot of opportunities for scammers. The first signs of the campaign showed up mid-May and the final redirect destination changes every two to three days. Following the links brings visitors to a familiar strategy where fake CAPTCHA websites hijack your clipboard and try to trick visitors into infecting their own device.

Read more…
Source: Malwarebytes Labz


Sign up for our Newsletter
The latest news and insights delivered right to your inbox.


Related:

  • Backdoor code found in popular Bootstrap-Sass Ruby library

    April 5, 2019

    Backdoor code was found added in a popular Ruby library used for frontend user interfaces inside Ruby and Ruby on Rails applications. The malicious code was removed via a library update. The library affected by this incident is Bootstrap-Sass, a Ruby package that provides developers with a Sass-version of Bootstrap, the most popular UI framework for developers today. The backdoor’s ...

  • LokiBot Trojan Spotted Hitching a Ride Inside .PNG Files

    April 5, 2019

    Spam campaign features obfuscated .zipx archive that unpacks LokiBot attack. A spam campaign pushing the info-stealing LokiBot trojan leverages a novel technique to avoid detection. According to researchers, the spam messages include malicious .zipx attachment hidden inside a .PNG file that can slip past some email security gateways. According to Trustwave SpiderLabs, that first spotted the .PNG/LokiBot ...

  • A dozen US web servers are spreading 10 malware families, Necurs link suspected

    April 4, 2019

    Researchers have uncovered over a dozen servers, unusually registered in the United States, which are hosting ten different malware families spread through phishing campaigns potentially tied to the Necurs botnet. On Thursday, researchers from Bromium said they have monitored scams connected to this infrastructure during the May 2018 to March 2019 time period. Five families of banking ...

  • This new malware is scanning the internet for systems info on valuable targets

    April 3, 2019

    A new form of malware is scanning the internet for exposed web services and default passwords in what’s thought to be a reconnaissance operation – one which might signal a larger cyberattack is to come. Researchers at AT&T Alien Labs first spotted the malware in March and have named it Xwo after its primary module name. It’s thought that Xwo ...

  • Microsoft Edge and Internet Explorer Zero-Days Allow Access to Confidential Session Data

    April 2, 2019

    On March 30th, security researcher James Lee disclosed information on two zero-day vulnerabilities present in current versions of Microsoft Edge and Internet Explorer. These vulnerabilities make it possible for confidential information to be shared between websites. A flaw in the same-origin policy for these web browsers, called an Origin Validation Error (CWE-346), allows JavaScript embedded in a malicious ...

  • Mobile-First Phishing Kit Targets Verizon Customers

    April 2, 2019

    As people increasingly go mobile-first in their work and personal lives, cybercrime is keeping up: The latest is a phishing kit that specifically targets Verizon Wireless customers in the U.S. According to Jeremy Richards, a researcher at Lookout Security, the kit pushes phishing links to users via email, masquerading as messages from Verizon Customer Support. These ...