Don't be fooled by this new phishing attack hidden in online surveys
Phishing scams are growing more prevalent by the day and are becoming much more difficult to spot. It’s bad enough if you get tricked into clicking on a malicious link that leads to having account credentials stolen, but some crooks aren’t satisfied with just that.
A recent phishing attack played on COVID-19 fears and resulted in the victims’ device being infected with ransomware. Tap or click here to see this nasty scam in action and steps to prevent your device from being infected.
Now, there is a new phishing email making the rounds that you need to know about. Keep reading to find out how the thieves are pulling it off and one critical precautionary step you need to take to stop it.
Survey says: Do not click on that link
When we talk about sophisticated phishing attacks, that typically means thieves are spoofing emails and websites to look exactly like legitimate companies. By using authentic logos and setting up URLs that are almost identical to the real deal, it’s hard to distinguish between genuine and fake.
RELATED: Why are there so many phishing scams during COVID-19?
Welp, get ready for some next-level deception. Scammers have found a way to bypass spoofing legitimate emails and are sending their scams through actual emails from a legitimate survey company and are targeting Microsoft Office 365 clients.
According to researchers at Abnormal Security, cybercriminals are sending phishing emails through legitimate survey company SurveyMonkey. If not familiar, SurveyMonkey has around for over 20 years and hosts real surveys for anyone who signs up for an account.
Here’s how the scam works: thieves send potential victims an email through a real SurveyMonkey domain, surveymonkeyuser.com. However, the reply-to domain isn’t legitimate. Instead, it’s a malicious link that is supposedly needed to “take the survey.”
The malicious link is labeled, “Navigate to access statement.” If you click the link, you’re actually sent to a malicious web page that asks for your Microsoft Office 365 credentials. If you type your credentials on that site, you’re handing them over to thieves.
The trickery doesn’t stop there. The email also includes this clever line: “Please do not forward this email as its survey link is unique to you.” This makes the idea of signing in to your Microsoft Office 365 account necessary to confirm that it’s actually the person intended to take the survey. Pretty genius, wouldn’t you say?
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