Burobjorn on Tue, 13 Nov 2007 15:57:59 +0100 (CET)
|
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
Re: [Nettime-nl] Re: Melding over de radioactive besmetting van Amsterdam
|
Ruud H.G. van Tol wrote:
Marja Oosterman schreef:
Subject: Melding over de radioactive besmetting van Amsterdam
Flauwe grap of ernst??
Ernst! Het is namelijk beDoeld om je naar de in de tekst genoemde links
te lokken.
De betreffende webstek probeert Windows-PC's te besmetten.
<spam> Het is never nooit niet te vroeg om op Ubuntu over te stappen.
</spam>
Het is inderdaad nep. Zie ook onderstaande stukje wat ik gisteren op mn
blog publiceerde...
Weirdest spam ever…
I just got two spam messages both containing the same message. That’s
not unusual, but the message of the emails was. I got curious and took a
closer look…
No haiku spam , no penis enlargements(neah, not going to link this one.
I had my share of aspiring but clearly illiterate porn
actresses/actors), no vicodin , no russian dacha’s (yes, I really got
these!) for sale nor am I asked to assist in transfering a large sum of
money so that my Nigerian friend can safely leave the country with his
fortune. None of these were present in the message used in the spam I
received. There were also no attachments to the spam message which is
odd. Nowadays spammers do anything to penetrate through spamfilters
using images, pdf files and apparently even mp3 files to get their
sleazy messages across. More often than not I get spam message with
attachments. These ones however were just plain HTML messages.
What also sets these two messages apart is that they are in Dutch, which
is also rare for me. Now the contents of message is just plain strange.
It talks about the Dutch city Amsterdam having been contaimenated with
radio-active radiation and it states that the government does not openly
acknowledge this, but only in private. I like that last sentence.
They’re willing to admit it, but only in private. For those able to read
Dutch:
Op internet-forums is er een melding verschenen over een stevige
explosie in een nederlandse Atoomcentrale in de buurt van Amsterdam.
De getuigen beweren dat die explosie op 4 november rond 15 uur
plaatsvond. Een inwoonster van de stad belde haar familie op en vertelde
dat er in de stad de telefoonaamsluitingen worden uitgeschakeld,
zodat de mensen niemand konden opbellen.
Zij beweert ook dat er inderdaad een explosie, zelfs een heel
ernstige, op het Atoomsentrale plaatsvond en dat de radioactive wolk zich op
dit moment snel verplaatst.
De overheid bevestigt deze informatie niet officieel maar wel
tijdens de prive gesprekken.
Toch plaatsen de inwoners op het internet fotos van de gevolgen van
de explosie en diens slachtoffers.
In this message there is ony one link cloaked with another link, both
are Geocities urls and both point to the same site. That seems odd. Why
cloak a url when both are pointing to the same address? Why are both
untrusted and non-popular websites instead of popular and ‘trusted’
websites as most spammer tend to do, so people are easily tricked in
clicking the link? That doesn’t make any sense to me. The ip address
used by the site (58.65.238.36) is according to the whois database part
of a Chinese ip range as you can see:
inetnum: 58.65.232.0 - 58.65.239.255
netname: HOSTFRESH
descr: HostFresh
descr: Internet Service Provider
country: HK
admin-c: PL466-AP
tech-c: PL466-AP
status: ALLOCATED PORTABLE
mnt-by: APNIC-HM
mnt-lower: MAINT-HK-HOSTFRESH
mnt-routes: MAINT-HK-HOSTFRESH
remarks: Please send Spam & Abuse report to
remarks: abuse@hostfresh.com
remarks: -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-++-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
remarks: This object can only be updated by APNIC hostmasters.
remarks: To update this object, please contact APNIC
remarks: hostmasters and include your organisation’s account
remarks: name in the subject line.
remarks: -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-++-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
changed: hm-changed@apnic.net 20060612
changed: hm-changed@apnic.net 20060613
changed: hm-changed@apnic.net 20061018
source: APNIC
person: Piu Lo
nic-hdl: PL466-AP
e-mail: ipadmin@hostfresh.com
address: No. 500, Post Office, Tuen Mun, N.T., Hong Kong
phone: +852-35979788
fax-no: +852-24522539
country: HK
changed: ipadmin@hostfresh.com 20071025
mnt-by: MAINT-HK-HOSTFRESH
source: APNIC
The accompanying webpage tries to trick you into downloading somekind of
executable file (seems targeted at machines running Windows) called
iPIX-install.exe I tried to install it (don’t try this at home…), but
get a 503 service unavailable message. According to this post on 22th of
octobre from the German Chip security blog this piece of malware was not
well-detected by most virus and/or mallware scanners at that time, so be
careful!
This has to be the weirdest spam I had in ages. The whole message feels
to me as a sort 21th century version of Orson Welles’ radioplay of H.G.
Wells’ War of the Worlds . Instead of the radio, email is now the medium
and stage. Instead of entertaining (or frighten…) people with sound,
this message aims to ‘frighten’ (in a quite amateuristic way) people
using somekind of conspiracy or sci-fi text while in the meantime infect
as many machines as possible.
I wonder what kind of people create these annoying, horrible yet
intruiging storytelling ‘artworks’ also known as spam?
ps: for the spam vigilantes among us, here are the original messages
including headers (spam1.txt , spam2.txt) saved as plain text for your
own private digital forensics fun. Enjoy! I already sent an abuse email,
but feel free to do this as well.
link: http://www.burobjorn.nl/blog/?p=281
--
met vriendelijke groet,
Bjorn Wijers
* b u r o b j o r n .nl *
digitaal vakmanschap | digital craftsmanship
Concordiastraat 68-114
3551 EM Utrecht
The Netherlands
phone: +31 30 2444 101
http://www.burobjorn.nl
______________________________________________________
* Verspreid via nettime-nl. Commercieel gebruik niet
* toegestaan zonder toestemming. <nettime-nl> is een
* open en ongemodereerde mailinglist over net-kritiek.
* Meer info, archief & anderstalige edities:
* http://www.nettime.org/.
* Contact: Menno Grootveld (rabotnik@xs4all.nl).