Online bank-theft software grows more sophisticated

Advertisement
By Reuters | Updated: 18 June 2012 15:30 IST
Two of the most pervasive and dangerous types of software for stealing money from bank accounts have been improved and can now transfer money out automatically, without a hacker's supervision, researchers said.

The latest variants of the widespread SpyEye and Zeus programs have already stolen as much as 13,000 Euros at a time from a single account and are in the early stages of deployment, according to investigators at Trend Micro Inc, a Japan-based security company that has many banks as customers.

Trend Micro Vice President Tom Kellerman told Reuters that his company's researchers had seen the new attacks on a dozen financial institutions in Germany, the United Kingdom and Italy. That is troubling because European banks generally have greater technology defenses than those in the United States, and Kellerman said it is "inevitable" that the variants will cross the Atlantic.

The new code has the potential to dramatically escalate the amount being stolen from accounts and a years-old arms race between the banks and criminal groups that are often based in Eastern Europe.

"This has tremendous implications," especially as Americans move toward banking by phone, said Kellerman. "This attack toolkit ushers in a new era of bank heists."

Like other security companies, Trend Micro profits by selling software and services to institutions and consumers worried about online spying and account takeovers.

Though written and controlled by different groups, SpyEye and Zeus share the ability to be installed on computers that visit malicious websites or legitimate pages that have been compromised by hackers. Both programs are sold in the burgeoning underground hacking economy, where they can be customized or improved with additional modules like those just discovered.

The programs already have used a technique called "web injection" to generate new entry fields when victims log on to any number of banks or other sensitive websites. Instead of seeing a bank ask for an account number and password, for example, a victimized user sees requests for both of those and an ATM card number. Everything typed in then gets whisked off to the hacker, who later signs in and transfers money to an accomplice's account.

Those transfers can be time-consuming, and the hacker has to think about how much can be sent out at once without drawing attention. Multiple, smaller transfers are preferable but take more time.

For the past year or more, some variants have also captured one-time passwords sent from the banks by text messages to client cell phones as an added security measure. But in those cases, a hacker had to be online within 30 or 60 seconds in order to use the one-time password.

The new software allows the criminal to siphon money out while he sleeps. It could significantly increase the number of hacked accounts and the speed with which they are drained.

Brett Stone-Gross, a senior security researcher with Dell Inc unit Dell SecureWorks, said thieves "will be able to extract more money" with automation.

But he also said the landscape might not be transformed by the development, because the main limiting factor for crime groups is the number of accomplices, known as money mules, that they can hire to accept transfers from victim accounts. Automation will not lessen the need for mules, Stone-Gross said.

Based in Eastern Europe
Trend Micro spoke online with sellers of the automated transfer modules who were based in Russia, Ukraine and Romania, where arrests and prosecutions are rare. Kellerman said the new software costs between $300 and $4,000 on top of the basic thieving tools, with customized jobs costing still more.

So far, the company has seen it run only on top of Microsoft Corp's Windows operating system, which is by far the most common for personal computers.

Banks generally make individuals whole for such losses if they are detected quickly. But recent versions of SpyEye and Zeus can present fake account balances to individual bank customers, so they might not realize their savings are being drained until too late.

Kellerman recommended that banks move more toward "out-of-band" authentication, such as direct phone calls to confirm online transfers.

In the United States, financial regulators last June also called for such checks and urged banks to explore newer technologies to combat Internet fraudsters. (Reporting by Joseph Menn in San Francisco; Editing by Gary Hill)

Copyright Thomson Reuters 2012

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Further reading: Bank-theft, Internet, SpyEye, Zeus, software
Advertisement
Popular Mobile Brands
  1. OnePlus 15R Review
  2. Apple's iPhone 18 Pro, iPhone Fold May Feature a Relocated Selfie Camera
  3. OnePlus 15R With 7,400mAh Battery, Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 Debuts at This Price
  4. OTT Releases of the Week: Thamma, Mrs Deshpande, Nayanam, and More
  5. OnePlus 15s Visits BIS Certification Website; Could Launch in India Soon
  6. Xiaomi 17 Ultra With Leica-Tuned Cameras Confirmed to Launch Soon
  7. OnePlus Pad Go 2 Launched in India With 10,050mAh Battery, 5G Connectivity
  8. OnePlus Watch Lite With Up to 10 Days Battery Life Launched: See Price
  9. Taskaree: The Smuggler's Web OTT Release Date: When and Where to Watch it Online?
  10. Google Pay Brings Its First Co-Branded UPI-Powered Digital Credit Card
  1. Nvidia to Reportedly Cut GeForce RTX 50 Series GPU Production Amid Global RAM Shortage
  2. Apple Allows Third-Party App Stores, Relaxes Payment Restrictions in Japan to Comply With MSCA Act
  3. Hogwarts Legacy Has Sold 40 Million Copies, Warner Bros. Games Announces
  4. OnePlus 15s Listing on BIS Certification Website Hints at Imminent Launch in India
  5. Infinix Xpad Edge Launched With 13.2-Inch Display, 8,000mAh Battery: Price, Specifications
  6. Ethirneechal Thodargiradhu Now Streaming on SunNXT: What You Need to Know
  7. The Villainess Is Adored by the Prince of the Neighbor Kingdom OTT Release Date: Know When and Where to Watch This Japanese Anime Series Online
  8. Easygoing Defense by the Optimistic Lord Anime to Stream on Crunchyroll in January 2026
  9. Eko OTT Release Reportedly Revealed: When and Where to Watch it Online?
  10. Pornhub User Data Reportedly Stolen by Hacker Group ShinyHunters, Threaten to Expose
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.