It’s been a boom time for social engineering. Pandemic panic, desperation as income concerns grew, and worry over health and wellness made it easier for criminals to tap into fear.
Social engineering, of course, means attacking the user rather than the computing system itself, trying to extract information or incite an action that will lead to compromise. It's as old as lying, with a new name for the computing age—and that's a perfect metaphor for how social engineering tactics evolve.
"It's generally the same tricks wrapped up in new packaging—and that's exactly what we are seeing,” said Perry Carpenter, chief evangelist and strategy officer at KnowBe4, a security awareness training company.
As security pros know, the packaging matters, and a familiar attack may slip through defenses in an unfamiliar guise.
Here are some tactics social engineering experts say are on the rise in 2021.
1. Malicious QR codes
QR code-related phishing fraud has popped up on the radar screen in the last year.
QR codes—those machine-readable, black-and-white matrix codes arranged in a square—have become an increasingly popular way for companies to engage with consumers and deliver services in the midst of COVID-19. For example, many restaurants have ditched paper menus, and instead allow patrons to scan a QR code with their smartphone. Similarly, many Girl Scouts posted QR codes for no-contact ordering and delivery of cookies this spring.
But many of the websites that QR codes send people to are operated by third-party vendors. When scanned, a malicious QR code can connect phones to a malicious destination—just like clicking on a bad link. Same concept; new wrapper.
“People can become conditioned to just assume that the code and website is legit,” said Carpenter.
The ‘delivery’ methods for this social engineering tactic vary. Oz Alashe, CEO of U.K.-based security and analytics company CybSafe, said he has heard about leaflet drops in some neighborhoods with fraudulent codes that promise "Scan this QR code to have a chance of winning an Xbox.”
“Often the code will lead to a dodgy site which downloads malware to their phone,” said Alashe.
2. Browser notification hijack
Web sites have for several years asked visitors to approve “notifications” from the site. What was once a useful way to engage with readers and keep them up to date is now, of course, also a social engineering tool.
“These are called push notifications, and they can be weaponized,” said Carpenter. “The problem is that many users blindly click 'yes' to allow these notifications.” While many users have learned some level of caution with web browsers, the notifications appear more like system messages from the device itself, rather than the browser.
Even for users who don’t blindly say yes, scammers find ways to install their notification scripts. Tactics include disguising subscription consent as another action, like a CAPTCHA, or switching the “accept” and “decline” buttons on subscription alerts mid-action.
Once the crook has a user’s (ill-gotten) consent, they start inundating them with messages—and the messages are usually phishing schemes, or scam notifications that contain malware.
3. Collaboration scams
With this social engineering tactic, cyber criminals target professionals in collaborative fields, said Alashe, including designers, developers, and even security researchers. The lure is an invitation that asks them to collaborate on work.
Recent pandemic lockdowns and expanded work-from-home increased people's comfort with remote collaboration, so this tactic fit the times well.
“The threat actors send over a Visual Studio Project containing malicious code. The user self-runs the program, and their device is infected pretty quickly. This attack essentially exploits the desire or need to assist or help others with passion projects,” said Alashe.
Tzury Bar Yochay, co-founder and CTO of security firm Reblaze, said examples of this attack are often well-crafted, showing great attention to detail.
“Attackers posed as active researchers and built social proof"—with apparent third parties validating their research—"using a blog including articles from industry sources as ‘guest posts,’ Twitter accounts, YouTube videos, LinkedIn, Discord, and more,” he said. A suspicious target may be put at ease by this seemingly wide social footprint.
4. Supply chain partner impersonation
George Gerchow, CSO at Sumo Logic, said attacks that exploit parts of an organization’s supply chain are now a big problem.
“It's not easy to defend what you can't see, and you are only as strong as the weakest link,” said Gerchow. “For example, there have been a plethora of targeted emails coming in that look like they are from your trusted partners but are in fact bad actors posing as employees you may know within your network.”
Gerchow said he first observed scam gift card offers presented to Sumo Logic employees, masked as incentives or thank-yous from the company’s real business partners.
But the attacks have become even more detailed over time.
“Now we see these long, sophisticated attempts to build trust or relationships with some of our outbound-facing teams whose entire job is to help. The bad actors have even posed as suppliers using our product with free accounts and have gone through use cases and scenarios to engage expertise within our company.”
By establishing these trusted relationships, the attackers’ ultimate goal is to make standard social engineering tactics more effective, eliciting help in bypassing security controls, or sending along malware that will compromise the target company’s systems.
The headline-making attack on SolarWinds is an example of a supply chain attack—in that case, a specific version called a vendor email compromise attack (VEC). As SolarWinds officials noted, an “email account was compromised and used to programmatically access accounts of targeted SolarWinds personnel in business and technical roles.”
5. Deepfake recordings
Social engineers are now using deepfakes—startlingly realistic recordings that use artificial intelligence to simulate a specific person’s appearance or voice—to trick victims into divulging information or performing an action that benefits the attacker.
Reblaze’s Bar Yochay said audio deepfake attacks—in which the attacker uses a “cloned” voice that is nearly indistinguishable from a real person's voice to create a scam audio recording—are a growing concern. One of the earliest successful examples came in 2019, when a fake recording of a CEO’s voice was used to instruct an employee to immediately transfer money to an international account.
“The recording was left as a voicemail to the subordinate, who obeyed the fraudulent instructions and sent $243,000 to the attackers,” said Bar Yochav.
Gerchow also said he has seen criminals use deepfake recordings to manipulate staff into sending money or offering up private information—only audio recordings so far, but Gerchow believes video deepfakes are just a matter of time.
“Training, awareness, self-reporting, and transparency will be the only way to scale security around these attacks,” said Gerchow. “Security needs to be approachable and of course, log everything.”
6. Text fraud
While text has been a conduit for social engineering scams for a while, Rebecca Herold, a privacy and security expert, says texting tactics are up in prominence.
“We are becoming a society where a large portion of the population prefer communicating via text messages as opposed to phone. People are now extremely used to communicating very confidential types of information via text,” says Herold.
Because grocery and food delivery has grown in the last year, delivery-related scam texts are up. Other common lures include texts that promise information about COVID stimulus checks that link victims back to a website that looks like the IRS site and asks for sensitive personal information, such as a birth date and social security number.
Herold said she has also seen text scams in which fraudsters impersonate the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and tell victims they must take a "mandatory online COVID test" using a provided link.
“Then, like other scams, their personal information is taken and malware is often loaded onto their computing device,” said Herold.
As with QR codes, victims simply have not developed the level of awareness and caution needed.
7. Typosquatting or lookalike domains
Carpenter said typosquatting—or lookalike domains—are often served up in a business email compromise (BEC) attack. Fraudsters impersonate legitimate domains in order to fool victims into thinking they are in a safe location.
They do this with many tricks, including misspelling the domain (think Gooogle instead of Google) or adding a different top-level domain (.uk instead of .co.uk). Unlike the often sloppy versions from earlier days, today these sites may feature sophisticated designs, carefully detailed mimicry of legitimate sites, and sophisticated functionality.
“Social engineering victims are usually tricked into either feeling psychological safety by their choice or into seeking psychological safety in a way that will play into an attacker's hands,” said Carpenter.
Criminals set these sites not only to deliver malware, but also to capture credit card information or other sensitive data through fake login fields or other fake forms.
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