Phishers…
…I’d like to strangle them all.
So I get Yet Another bogus email from Bank of America in my mailbox a little while ago, and as I will do for kicks and grins and laughs, I open it up using the View Source function in my mail client (Mozilla Thunderbird), and look for the deceptive link…
Your primary e-mail address for Bank of America Online Banking has been changed. Want to confirm this email is from Bank of America? Log in to Online Banking, select Manage Alerts and Alerts History to view all alerts sent from Bank of America. Your Alerts History is updated every 2 hours.
Use the link below to go to you online account:
The email is, naturally, full of all sorts of links to the actual Bank of America website, from which it gets the actual Bank of America logos and such. But the Manage Your Account link, again naturally, goes elsewhere. This is how phishers operate. So just for kicks and grims I go look it up…
…and what I discover is that this particular phisher isn’t operating from some hit and run domain, but from a Belgian Artist’s website, a lady named Nell Dominique apparently, because I can’t read the French her website is written in. So I dig a little more. I wget the page the phish mail is linked to…
All that page is, is a simple re-direct to another page. That other page lives on the website of the Securities Investors Association of Singapore. So they’ve been hacked too. And the page the hacker(s) have inserted there seems to be a copy of the actual Bank of America login page. I can’t tell at a glance where they’ve made their devious little substitutions, but at a quick guess it seems like they’re running some servlets on the SIAS web site they’ve hacked, that substitute for the servlets that would be running on the BOA website, were that the actual BOA website, and not somebody else’s web site. But that’s just a guess. I don’t have time to dig that deeply into that code.
So… Some unsuspecting person opens up this email that seems to have come from their bank. It says their email has been changed. They panic and think that someone is trying to break into their online account. They click the handy link, and get routed to the website of a Belgian artist, then to a Singapore investment website, which serves them up a page that sure looks like it’s the Bank of America web page, except it isn’t. They enter their account name and password and then (I think, I haven’t really studied the code there carefully), a servlet wakes up and sends that information to God Knows Where.
If anyone reading this knows a little French, can you please tell the poor soul at nelldominique.be that her website has been hacked. There’s a page, "boa.html" in her html root that she needs to get rid of. I’ve already notified the folks at SIAS about their little uninvited guest, and I reckon I’ll tell Bank of America what’s going on too, although by now they probably already know.
[Update…] As of December 12 the Phisher link on Nell’s page was gone. So her web admin either discovered it, or someone clued them in. Now if the cops could just get their hands on the lout who put it there…