Phishing e-mail that hides malicious link from Outlook users

Date:

Share post:

I recently came across an interesting phishing e-mail. At first glance, it looked like a “normal” phishing that tried to pass itself off as a message from one of the Czech banks asking account holders to update their information…

Nevertheless, when I hovered above the rectangle that a recipient was expected to click on, I was surprised to see that the link in the pop-up actually pointed to the legitimate domain of the bank.

My first thought was that threat actors behind the phishing made a mistake. My assumption was that they used a real e-mail from the bank as a baseline that they wanted to modify to create a message that would point recipients to a malicious site, and mistakenly sent it out before it was finished – strange as it may sound, it wouldn’t have been nowhere near the first case of something like that I’ve seen. 

Nevertheless, once I looked at the HTML code of the message, it quickly emerged that I was wrong. The threat actors actually used a technique which changes displayed content based on a “browser” it is opened in. The technique in question leverages HTML conditional statements




In this case, threat actors likely used this technique with the intention of hiding the malicious link in corporate environments, where Outlook is commonly used (alongside security mechanisms that scan web traffic, DNS requests, etc.) and where users would probably be less likely to click, since an e-mail from a bank sent to their work e-mail, instead of a private one, would probably be a red flag on its own, while ensuring that recipients who opened the e-mail in a non-Outlook client would still be directed to the malicious website.


While this approach isn’t new – in fact, it has been documented since at least 2019[1] – its use in the wild is not too common… And since it is therefore among the lesser-known phishing techniques I believe it is worthy of at least this short reminder of its existence.


[1] https://www.libraesva.com/outlook-comments-abused-to-deliver-malware/


———–

Jan Kopriva

LinkedIn

Nettles Consulting

Source link

spot_img

Related articles

Welcome To Video – Darknet Diaries

Full Transcript Andy Greenberg brings us a gut wrenching story of how criminal investigators used...

Go DRAM-less With The Biwin Black Opal X570 2TB

Meet The Maxio 1806A 8 Channel Controller With the rising cost of NAND, going DRAM-less on your next SSD...

Navan IPO tumbles 20% after historic debut under SEC shutdown workaround

Navan, the corporate travel and expense platform, finished its first day of trading on the Nasdaq on Thursday...