Hans-Martin Mosner schrieb:

Hi folks,

I'm trying to understand the root causes and vulnerabilities that lead to hacked mailboxes. Currently, we can handle dynamic IP ranges pretty well, and we have an extensive list of network ranges whose owner are spammers or knowingly accept spammers as customers.

So what mainly remains as spam sources are hacked servers/websites, hacked mail accounts, and freemail accounts registered with the purpose of spamming (I'm looking at you, Google).

Here I want to focus on hacked mail accounts. I can think of two major root causes but I have no idea about their relative significance:



I suspect a large amount would be caused by phishing. Users getting a malicious email (generally) leading them to a phishing page where they happily introduce their credentials. Some users fall even for "badly designed" phishing sites without any sophistication at all.
If after compromise the phishing uses the newly-minted credentials to send itself to their address-book (which on corporate systems can be the whole organization), that explains how there can be such clusters. Fresh students would not know the ins and outs of their new system (they may not even know how to properly use their email account, but that's a bigger issue) thus being easy prey when receiving a "Your mailbox is getting full" email. Corporate users (Government or otherwise) don't have such excuse, though.

Getting infected with malware would be less prevalent than this, one would hope. There are many more layers where it can be detected, both by the users themselves (would generally require more steps and show more warnings) and detection of the malware at the endpoint. Although users will nevertheless get themselves compromised no matter what.


A fourth recent source of compromised mailboxes are compromises of unpatched Exchange servers, albeit that's recent and will eventually disappear.


Best regards

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