The Malware threats also arrive during this season of love. The
researchers recently found a new attack targeting Canadian users looking
for a Romantic Dinner Giveaway. The email appears to be about a special
Valentine Dinner, and has an attachment which is actually a malicious
.RTF file (
detected as TROJ_ARTIEF. VDY), using a known buffer overflow vulnerability (
CVE-2012-0158) in Windows Common Controls, allows remote code execution to drop a backdoor (BKDR_INJECT
.VDY) onto the affected system.
This Valentine's Day, with the popularity of Android phones and iPhones,
it seems practical to impress your beloved by sending e-cards using
various Valentine's Day Apps, but you never realize that despite sending
E-cards, you are also inflicting an Android malware on your beloveds which could be worse to your relation.
The security researchers from Bitdefender recently released a
report, noted how such Valentine's Day apps could demand undue
permissions, that could violate users’ privacy, rack up users’ phone
bills, and even possibly cause identity theft.
The researchers have detected various malware-inflicted apps, one of which is ‘Valentine’s Day 2014 Wallpaper.’
The app records user’s location and his browsing history in the process
without having any justification for asking permissions.
Another is ‘Valentine's Day Frames’, the app that reads the
user’s contacts list, which is logically an odd request because the app
is only intended to adorn user’s romantic photographs with Valentine's
Day themed photo frames. So what’s the use of reading your contact list for this app?
One more, ‘Love Letters for Chat, Status’ which allows you to
share love quotes, letters, and even poems to your dearest friends, but
the app is capable to send emails, make phone calls, change audio
settings, and even modify calendar events without your permission. So
gifting this to your beloved may cause an end to you sweet relation.
Seasonal deals and offers are common place, so its users own duty to
spot what’s malicious and what’s not. Following are some tips every
Internet user must follow:
- Do not to open emails and click links in wild from unknown sources.
- Do not run attached files that come from unknown sources, especially these days.
- The biggest bargains aren’t always the biggest stealing. If an offer
sounds too good to be true, it probably is, but if you are making
purchases online, then prefer a reputed shopping site and type the
address of the store in the browser, rather than going through any links
that have been sent to you.
- Has an effective security solution installed in your system that is capable of detecting both known and new malware strains.
Don’t spread malware... Spread love :) Stay safe! Stay tuned to Rex Hacker.