Googlewhack trick used to slip junk mail past spam filters
Spammers feel lucky
Advanced features in Google's search engine are being
used by spammers to disguise the URLs of spamvertised sites. Hackers
have been using Google search functions to hunt for vulnerabilities. Now
their peers in the junk mail business are getting into the act,
Symantec reports.
Google
supports a variety of advanced query words that are capable of
narrowing the scope of a search. Spammers have latched onto this
functionality as a means to direct an end user to a URL advertising
their products or services, without directly pointing at a site. The
approach, as with so many in the field of spamming, is designed to
bypass junk mail filters.
Symantec came across the technique after coming across spam emails
containing a URL that, on casual inspection, resembled a "Google search
results" link. However, when clicked, the URL directs surfers to a site
selling replicas of expensive watches, pens, and jewelry.The
trick worked because a spammer had managed to make a search query that
was specific to their website, using an advanced Google search combining
the "inurl" and "intext" operators. Next comes the clever part:
spammers simulate a user click on Google's seldom-used "I'm Feeling
Lucky" button, so that surfers are taken directly to the first result
that comes up for the entered search query. As the spammer has designed
the query to yield only one result - that of the spamvertised site -
surfers are taken directly to a junk-mail-promoted site after selecting
what looks like a search result entry.Having designed the trick,
it's straightforward for spammers to pump out emails designed to evade
junk mail filters. Fortunately anti-spam firms are able to counter the
approach, which represents another skirmish in the ongoing war of the
inboxes between those developing junk mails and filters. "As usual,
spammers keep changing their techniques to defeat the filters," explains
Symantec researcher Jitender Sarda. "But on the other hand, we develop
new techniques and technology to counter them." ®
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