A sophisticated group of spammers has been targeting since late May high-salaried workers at selective corporations in a spam attack using e-mail disguised as messages from the Better Business Bureau, the Internal Revenue Service and the Federal Trade Commission. A fourth variation of the spam attack surfaced the second week of June as an e-mail invoice from a variety of companies seeking payment for services rendered. “The Trojan is unusually capable,” Paul Henry, vice president for technology evangelism at Secure Computing, told TechNewsWorld.
Boutique Malware: Custom-Made for the Executive Suite
Posted by: Jack M. Germain June 23, 2007 01:30 AMA sophisticated group of spammers has been targeting since late May high-salaried workers at selective corporations in a spam attack using e-mail disguised as messages from the Better Business Bureau, the Internal Revenue Service and the Federal Trade Commission. A fourth variation of the spam attack surfaced the second week of June as an e-mail invoice from a variety of companies seeking payment for services rendered. “The Trojan is unusually capable,” Paul Henry, vice president for technology evangelism at Secure Computing, told TechNewsWorld.