A newly discovered phishing campaign tries to ease potential victims into feeling secure about sharing credit card numbers and other information, according to research published Thursday by Trustwave’s SpiderLabs team.
The process includes a “chatbot-like” page that “tries to engage and establish trust with the victim” rather than simply embed an information-stealing link directly in an email or attached document, according to the report.
“We say ‘chatbot-like’ because it is not an actual chatbot,” writes researcher Adrian Perez. “The application already has predefined responses based on the limited options given.”
Responses to the bogus bot take the potential victim through a series of steps that include a fake CAPTCHA, a login page for a delivery service and ultimately a page that captures credit card information.
Like the fake chatbot, some of the other steps in the process aren’t very sophisticated. The CAPTCHA, for instance, is just a jpeg file, according to SpiderLabs. But the credit card page actually executes a few things in the background.
“The credit card page has some input validation methods. One is card number validation, wherein it tries to not only check the validity of the card number but also determine the type of card the victim has inputed,” Perez writes.
The company says it discovered the campaign in late March, and as of Thursday morning it…
