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New password-stealing virus targets Facebook

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A generic picture of a computer keyboard. OFFPO REUTERS/Catherine Benson

A generic picture of a computer keyboard. OFFPO

Credit: Reuters/Catherine Benson

BOSTON | Wed Mar 17, 2010 9:08pm EDT

BOSTON (Reuters) - Hackers have flooded the Internet with virus-tainted spam that targets Facebook's estimated 400 million users in an effort to steal banking passwords and gather other sensitive information.

The emails tell recipients that the passwords on their Facebook accounts have been reset, urging them to click on an attachment to obtain new login credentials, according to anti-virus software maker McAfee Inc.

If the attachment is opened, it downloads several types of malicious software, including a program that steals passwords, McAfee said on Wednesday.

Hackers have long targeted Facebook users, sending them tainted messages via the social networking company's own internal email system. With this new attack, they are using regular Internet email to spread their malicious software.

A Facebook spokesman said the company could not comment on the specific case, but pointed to a status update the company posted on its web site earlier on Wednesday warning users about the spoofed email and advising users to delete the email and to warn their friends.

McAfee estimates that hackers sent out tens of millions of spam across Europe, the United States and Asia since the campaign began on Tuesday.

Dave Marcus, McAfee's director of malware research and communications, said that he expects the hackers will succeed in infecting millions of computers.

"With Facebook as your lure, you potentially have 400 million people that can click on the attachment. If you get 10 percent success, that's 40 million," he said.

The email's subject line says "Facebook password reset confirmation customer support," according to Marcus.

(Additional reporting by Alexei Oreskovic; Editing by Bernard Orr)

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Comments (11)
caution wrote:
This is *not* a virus. It is called a scam.

A scam operates by enticing victims to click the links that lead to other places, thus scamming them of their passwords. The human interaction is key.

People are generally uneducated about safety and security on the internet, and so they go ahead and click anything that looks remotely like what they want.

Note: Hacker is also the wrong word. A ’scammer’ is a person who takes advantage of slightly uneducated people (in this case, the internet).

Mar 18, 2010 3:58pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
mikelz wrote:
Another word for it is “Phishing.” Calling it a virus is needlessly alarming.

Mar 18, 2010 5:01pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
mikelz wrote:
Sorry about that last one. This does launch a program that records keystrokes. That’s neither Phishing nor a Virus. It’s called Malware.

Mar 18, 2010 5:04pm EDT  --  Report as abuse
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