{"id":1550,"date":"2009-03-03T08:10:33","date_gmt":"2009-03-03T08:10:33","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.darknet.org.uk\/?p=1550"},"modified":"2015-09-09T19:39:01","modified_gmt":"2015-09-09T11:39:01","slug":"koobface-worm-variant-hits-facebook","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.darknet.org.uk\/2009\/03\/koobface-worm-variant-hits-facebook\/","title":{"rendered":"Koobface Worm Variant Hits Facebook"},"content":{"rendered":"

Koobface<\/a> is computer worm that targets the users of the social networking websites Facebook and Myspace. Koobface ultimately attempts, upon successful infection, to gather sensitive information from the victims such as credit card numbers.<\/p>\n

A new variation of Koobface has popped up aggressively on Facebook and is attempting to steal login credentials for other social networking sites.<\/p>\n

It’s heavy on the user of Social Engineering<\/a> by using the old familiarity ploy and trying to lure users into execution the spurious malware.<\/p>\n

Researchers at Trend Micro report that a new variant of the Koobface worm is squiggling through Facebook, infecting users and attempting to steal cookies with log-in information for sites such as MySpace.com, MyYearbook.com, Bebo and Hi5 Networks. The Koobface worm first appeared in 2008.<\/p>\n

Researchers at Trend Micro are reporting that a new variant of the Koobface worm is spreading on Facebook.<\/p>\n

Koobface first appeared in 2008, with separate variants striking members of Facebook and MySpace.com. Now the Koobface worm is back again, with an eye toward stealing cookies for other social networking sites.<\/p>\n

According to Trend Micro, the new variant sends Facebook messages claiming to be from a friend. The messages link to a spoofed YouTube video. In an interesting social engineering ploy, the malicious landing page not only displays the friend’s name, but also a picture pulled from the person’s Facebook profile.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n

It’s a pretty standard modus operandi for malware distributors, a new version of Flash seems to be a very common theme amongst these kinds of worm.<\/p>\n

It seems like quite a lot of thought has gone into the design of this worm and due to the pretty slick distribution method it might become quite a large scale infection. It’s endgame is to create some kind of botnet and to steal the real information of value (banking details, credit card numbers etc).<\/p>\n