Not long ago, phishing attacks were fairly easy for the average Internet user to spot: Full of grammatical and spelling errors, and linking to phony bank or email logins at unencrypted (http:// vs. https://) Web pages. Increasingly, however, phishers are upping their game, polishing their copy and hosting scam pages over https:// connections — complete with the green lock icon in the browser address bar to make the fake sites appear more legitimate.
According to stats released this week by anti-phishing firm PhishLabs, nearly 25 percent of all phishing sites in the third quarter of this year were hosted on HTTPS domains — almost double the percentage seen in the previous quarter…
Source: KrebsonSecurity
A brand new (and live) PayPal phishing page that uses SSL (https://) to appear more legitimate.
Thank you!
Thank you for your interest in Storage Optimizer Pro! We will keep you posted regarding updates and let you know as we near release.
Thank you!
Thank you for your interest in Storage Optimizer Pro! We will keep you posted regarding updates and let you know as we near release.