I guess the news about the death of Osama bin Laden is starting to reach everyone around the world. Every time something big as this happens, people get curious and start searching on the Internet.
Facebook ads are already spreading using videos of the death of Osama bin Laden as a trigger. On one Page we can see multiple users posting the same URL, with the following message:"Sweet! FREE Subway To Celebrate Osamas Death - 56 Left HURRY!" or "2 Southwest Plane Tickets for Free - 56 Left Hurry" and then a link to a short URL service (tiny.cc).
When you click the link, you will be redirected to a page, where it says that you need to post a message to get more instruction on how you can win.
If the user writes the message, it will post a new message on the user’s wall, to spread the message further, and then just redirect you to another page where you can win something else. The scheme of this scam is to keep redirecting you to pages where you have to enter information such as email, and eventually get money for all new users or clicks.
Please make sure that your computer is up to date with all the security patches, that your antivirus is updated and if you do click on the links from Facebook and other social media pages, make sure that you don’t give out any important information (username, passwords).
Since the bad guys seem to be taking advantage of this opportunity quite heavily, we expect to see more malicious code getting triggered by the death of Osama bin Laden.
Author: David Jacoby, Kaspersky Lab Expert.
Facebook ads are already spreading using videos of the death of Osama bin Laden as a trigger. On one Page we can see multiple users posting the same URL, with the following message:"Sweet! FREE Subway To Celebrate Osamas Death - 56 Left HURRY!" or "2 Southwest Plane Tickets for Free - 56 Left Hurry" and then a link to a short URL service (tiny.cc).
When you click the link, you will be redirected to a page, where it says that you need to post a message to get more instruction on how you can win.
If the user writes the message, it will post a new message on the user’s wall, to spread the message further, and then just redirect you to another page where you can win something else. The scheme of this scam is to keep redirecting you to pages where you have to enter information such as email, and eventually get money for all new users or clicks.
Please make sure that your computer is up to date with all the security patches, that your antivirus is updated and if you do click on the links from Facebook and other social media pages, make sure that you don’t give out any important information (username, passwords).
Since the bad guys seem to be taking advantage of this opportunity quite heavily, we expect to see more malicious code getting triggered by the death of Osama bin Laden.
Author: David Jacoby, Kaspersky Lab Expert.
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