By Nick Heath, 15 February 2008 12:40
NEWS
Leading UK banks have been targeted by online criminals who used Storm botnets to unleash phishing attacks.
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The attacks could mark the emergence of a new threat from the Storm botnet, according to a report from security company RSA's Anti-Fraud Command Center (AFCC).
UK financial institutions were the second most targeted in the world last month, accounting for 15 per cent of global banking brands targeted, behind the US with 61 per cent.
Attackers used the Storm botnet as a fast flux-network, frequently rotating the IP address of the infected computers sending out the phishing content, making them much more difficult to track down.
RSA analysts warn the Storm botnet could now be used as the infrastructure behind a new surge of fast-flux phishing attacks.

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1. Simon Allen
When I received phishes for, by coincidence, my own bank. I thought that they might like to know.
So I forward it to the webmaster with a suitable comment, and including all the headers.
I got back a standard e-mail telling that it was a phish and that I should not respond and that my bank never did that or that.
So I stopped bothering. If they cannot read their own email and thank their own customers for providing information, then they can drown in phishing attacks.