Fake Australian banking apps that look like the genuine article are appearing on the internet. Test your knowledge and see if you can tell the real from the fake.
Not only that 'missing the option to hide your password' wtf. That's the opposite of the eye icon.
Absolute panic bait. 'Can you determine the legitimacy of these login pages for banks you don't use based on incomplete data?? THEN YOU'RE IN DANGER!!!"
Wow did you not read the article? This isn't about a website login, it's about fake hijacked login screens on apps which last I checked, don't have URLs shown.
Agreed and I thought the exact same thing, although the website URL and possibly even the SSL certificate details still needs to be checked even with the 🔐.
Given that they remind readers what brands an Android phone phone could be, I don't think the article is aimed at many aussie zoners.
I guess they're trying to drive home that the scammer isn't coming at you with a poorly worded email riddled with typos here - the overlay can look legitimate (even if in some cases it still has typos lol). Probably would've been a bit much for them to cover every banking interface tbf.
Yeah, one of them said it was wrong because it had outdated information... but it had a higher version number and the correct one didn't have any date information... and also the correct one had a link to take you to a promotion and a suspicious looking 6-digit phone number... Banks are just terrible at looking trustworthy, when in doubt just find a second source for confirmation or look on the back of your card for their official support information.
The malware is powerful — it can record your calls, harvest your contacts, evade antivirus, bypass multi-factor authentication, log what you type and send you text messages.
Exclusive new data obtained by the ABC has uncovered what appears to be the first major distribution campaign of the malware, with Australians identified as specific targets.
This latest campaign against Australians was uncovered by Dario Durando, a senior threat analyst from ThreatFabric, a banking security platform based in the Netherlands.
An advertisement spruiking Octo boasts the malware has a "high survival rate", gives hackers "full device control" and has the ability to steal two-factor authentication codes.
Eward Driehuis, vice president of fraud engineering at ThreatFabric, said the group responsible for Octo was Russian-speaking and possibly linked to the Russian cybercrime underworld.
Stephanie Tonkin from the Consumer Action Law Centre said Australian banks weren't doing enough to protect customers, who were being hoodwinked by increasingly sophisticated scams.
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