惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

L
LINUX DO - 最新话题
小众软件
小众软件
C
Check Point Blog
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
V
Visual Studio Blog
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
P
Proofpoint News Feed
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
Recorded Future
Recorded Future
雷峰网
雷峰网
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
A
Arctic Wolf
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Project Zero
Project Zero
T
Tor Project blog
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
Scott Helme
Scott Helme
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
G
Google Developers Blog
Security Latest
Security Latest
MongoDB | Blog
MongoDB | Blog
T
Threatpost
I
InfoQ
T
Tenable Blog
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
S
Security Affairs
H
Hackread – Cybersecurity News, Data Breaches, AI and More
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
C
Cisco Blogs
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
美团技术团队
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
D
Docker
博客园 - 【当耐特】
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
Vercel News
Vercel News
PCI Perspectives
PCI Perspectives
Microsoft Azure Blog
Microsoft Azure Blog
C
CERT Recently Published Vulnerability Notes
月光博客
月光博客
Cloudbric
Cloudbric
A
About on SuperTechFans
F
Fortinet All Blogs

SANS Internet Storm Center, InfoCON: green

From a VHDX File to a Remcos RAT - SANS Internet Storm Center ISC Stormcast For Tuesday, June 16th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9974 Evil MSI Background: BASE64 Statistical Analysis - SANS ISC ISC Stormcast For Monday, June 15th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9972 ISC Stormcast For Friday, June 12th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9970 ISC Stormcast For Thursday, June 11th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9968 How has use of framing protection security headers changed in the past 3 years? ISC Stormcast For Wednesday, June 10th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9966 Microsoft June 2026 Patch Tuesday - SANS Internet Storm Center ISC Stormcast For Tuesday, June 9th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9964 TeamPCP Supply Chain Campaign: Activity Through 2026-06-07 ISC Stormcast For Monday, June 8th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9962 The Evil MSI Background is Back! - SANS Internet Storm Center ISC Stormcast For Friday, June 5th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9960 Microsoft's Coreutils for Windows - SANS Internet Storm Center ISC Stormcast For Thursday, June 4th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9958 Continuing Scans for swagger.json - SANS Internet Storm Center ISC Stormcast For Wednesday, June 3rd, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9956 New Wave Of Phishing Emails with SVG Files - SANS ISC ISC Stormcast For Tuesday, June 2nd, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9954 ISC Stormcast For Monday, June 1st, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9952 Unidentified RAT pushes NetSupport RAT - SANS ISC YARA-X 1.17.0 Release - SANS Internet Storm Center ISC Stormcast For Friday, May 29th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9950 Analysis of a Year of Files Uploaded to DShield Sensors ISC Stormcast For Thursday, May 28th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9948 Reconstructing an Akira Ransomware Kill Chain from Perimeter and Endpoint Logs ISC Stormcast For Wednesday, May 27th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9946 ISC Stormcast For Tuesday, May 26th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9944 Possible ACR Stealer From Page Impersonating Claude Microsoft Access VBA - SANS Internet Storm Center Wireshark 4.6.6 Released - SANS Internet Storm Center An Example of Stack String in High Level Language - SANS ISC Cross-Platform NPM Stealer - SANS Internet Storm Center ISC Stormcast For Friday, May 22nd, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9942 Selective HTTP Proxying in Linux - SANS Internet Storm Center ISC Stormcast For Thursday, May 21st, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9940 ISC Stormcast For Wednesday, May 20th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9938 ISC Stormcast For Tuesday, May 19th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9936 TeamPCP Supply Chain Campaign: Activity Through 2026-05-17 [Guest Diary] New Malware Libraries means New Signatures ISC Stormcast For Friday, May 15th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9934 Simple bypass of the link preview function in Outlook Junk folder ISC Stormcast For Thursday, May 14th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9932 ISC Stormcast For Wednesday, May 13th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9930 Proxying the Unproxyable? Sending EXE traffic to a Proxy Microsoft May 2026 Patch Tuesday - SANS Internet Storm Center ISC Stormcast For Tuesday, May 12th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9928 Apple Patches Everything - SANS Internet Storm Center Why we use CAPTCHAs - SANS Internet Storm Center ISC Stormcast For Monday, May 11th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9926 YARA-X 1.16.0 Release - SANS Internet Storm Center Another Universal Linux Local Privilege Escalation (LPE) Vulnerability: Dirty Frag ISC Stormcast For Friday, May 8th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9924 ISC Stormcast For Wednesday, May 6th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9920 Cleartext Passwords in MS Edge? In 2026? - SANS ISC SSL.com rotates their root certificate today - SANS ISC ISC Stormcast For Tuesday, May 5th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9918 TeamPCP Weekly Analysis: 2026-W18 (2026-04-27 through 2026-05-03) DShield Honeypot Update - SANS Internet Storm Center ISC Stormcast For Monday, May 4th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9916 Wireshark 4.6.5 Released - SANS Internet Storm Center Malicious Ad for Homebrew Leads to MacSync Stealer ISC Stormcast For Friday, May 1st, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9914 ISC Stormcast For Thursday, April 30th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9912 Danger of Libredtail [Guest Diary] - SANS Internet Storm Center Today's Odd Web Requests - SANS Internet Storm Center ISC Stormcast For Wednesday, April 29th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9910 HTTP Requests with X-Vercel-Set-Bypass-Cookie Header ISC Stormcast For Tuesday, April 28th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9908 TeamPCP Supply Chain Campaign: Update 008 - 26-Day Pause Ends with Three Concurrent Compromises (Checkmarx KICS, Bitwarden CLI Cascade, xinference PyPI), CanisterSprawl npm Worm Identified, and Tier 1 Coverage Returns ISC Stormcast For Friday, April 24th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9906 Apple Patches Exploited Notification Flaw - SANS ISC ISC Stormcast For Thursday, April 23rd, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9904 ISC Stormcast For Wednesday, April 22nd, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9902 [Guest Diary] Beyond Cryptojacking: Telegram tdata as a Credential Harvesting Vector, Lessons from a Honeypot Incident, (Wed, Apr 22nd) A .WAV With A Payload - SANS Internet Storm Center ISC Stormcast For Tuesday, April 21st, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9900 Handling the CVE Flood With EPSS - SANS Internet Storm Center ISC Stormcast For Monday, April 20th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9898 ISC Stormcast For Friday, April 17th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9896 Lumma Stealer infection with Sectop RAT (ArechClient2) ISC Stormcast For Thursday, April 16th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9894 [Guest Diary] Compromised DVRs and Finding Them in the Wild ISC Stormcast For Wednesday, April 15th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9892 Scanning for AI Models - SANS Internet Storm Center Microsoft Patch Tuesday April 2026. - SANS ISC ISC Stormcast For Tuesday, April 14th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9890 Scans for EncystPHP Webshell - SANS Internet Storm Center ISC Stormcast For Monday, April 13th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9888 Obfuscated JavaScript or Nothing - SANS Internet Storm Center ISC Stormcast For Thursday, April 9th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9886 Number Usage in Passwords: Take Two - SANS ISC TeamPCP Supply Chain Campaign: Update 007 - Cisco Source Code Stolen via Trivy-Linked Breach, Google GTIG Tracks TeamPCP as UNC6780, and CISA KEV Deadline Arrives with No Standalone Advisory More Honeypot Fingerprinting Scans - SANS Internet Storm Center ISC Stormcast For Wednesday, April 8th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9884 A Little Bit Pivoting: What Web Shells are Attackers Looking for? ISC Stormcast For Tuesday, April 7th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9882 How often are redirects used in phishing in 2026? - SANS ISC ISC Stormcast For Monday, April 6th, 2026 https://isc.sans.edu/podcastdetail/9880
[GUEST DIARY] Tearing apart website fraud to see how it works.
2026-05-13 · via SANS Internet Storm Center, InfoCON: green

[This is a Guest Diary by Joshua Nikolson, an ISC Intern and part of the SANS.edu Bachelor's degree in Applied Cybersecurity (BACS) program.]

Introduction

One day at work, a friend messaged me, “How do you check a website to see if it’s legit?” This friend recently received a phishing text message from a “bank”, and I figured he wanted to be careful and double-check. I told him to put the URL into VirusTotal but said that just because it may say it’s clean, that doesn’t mean it’s not malicious.

He sent me a screenshot of the VirusTotal page for the URL, with no detections and everything showing green. I took a moment to look at it a little more closely. The domain name was unusual, and right off the bat I could see it had been created in the last few months. As of now, it has one detection from a vendor. All domains mentioned in this blogpost will be listed in the Indicators of Compromise section at the end.

Going to the site, I could immediately tell that something was off about it. It was a secondhand marketplace that seemed to sell just about everything under the sun, with tons of listings in each category and items priced too good to be true. While the site had that “AI vibecoded feeling”, I wanted to give my friend something more concrete other than “don’t trust this site”.

I decided to reverse image search one of the product images, a Lenovo ThinkPad battery replacement, and after some digging, I found an eBay listing with all the same product images and item descriptions. I did this for a few more of the site’s listings and came to the same result. I let my friend know, and he said, “Yeah, it looked too good to be true”.

Finding a Marketplace

I found this interesting and wanted to see if I could find something similar again. Today, it is trivial to use AI to mass-deploy these scams, and I wanted to see what would happen if I tried to buy something.

Let’s look up what my friend was originally looking for: a Texas Instruments TI-nSpire CAS calculator. Simply searching on Google and going to the second page, something pops out to me. Why is a driving school selling a calculator?

The search result link, hxxps://desidrivingschool[.]com/listing/164903741/ redirects to a marketplace where it is for sale:

This domain looks suspicious on its own, and to add insult to injury, it was registered ~12 days ago on April 3rd, 2026:

What's happening here?

You may be asking why this Desi Driving School is showing up in the search results for this calculator? Good question. If you append “/sitemap.xml” to the URL, you can see tons of these listings that are meant to infiltrate the search results. This is a prime example of SEO poisoning, in which potential victims are lured through their shopping searches to these fake marketplaces.

Threat actors have previously used compromised WordPress sites as command-and-control infrastructure or to stage payloads, but this is being used as a distinct attack vector. Unfortunately, this website was likely compromised, whether through something like a malicious WordPress plugin or stolen credentials, and is now being used to drive traffic to this malicious marketplace:

You can see the range of products that this site offers. They must have a good distribution network.

While reverse-image searching for images of the calculator, I found another similar posting on a different fake marketplace. Same images, same description and title, same exact setup with a redirect…

And another… with what looks like loads of other compromised sites being used.

You can endlessly find these sites by searching any description of a product listed with quotes in Google to find the real item that is being sold and copied from, such as this blazer:

If the price was higher than the actual listing, you might think the scheme is just scraping listings, posting them at a higher price, then purchasing the cheaper item and shipping it. However, I do not think that is the case. Let’s try to buy this Eddie Bauer blazer with a fake identity and a fake debit card from Privacy.com and see what happens.

Right away, I can tell this checkout page is a replica of the Shopify checkout page and looks almost identical.

Choosing Mastercard, we’ll check out and pay now. Let’s prepare my fake card. Creating a temporary debit card with a $5 spending limit is extremely easy with Privacy.com, and I have my Mastercard ready.

First, I am instructed to enter my card here:

Then I get redirected to this page and must enter my information again:

After hitting pay now, a loading screen with a different URL is shown that reminds me of the PayPal loading screen:

And then I am redirected to a thank-you page for my order, despite the card being declined, which they know because it shows failure_code=failed in the URL.

Only one declined charge was seen on my card. However, in other testing instances, I have seen an additional charge at a different price than the “advertised product”.

The above screenshot is from the order we just made, and this next screenshot is from a different test where two charges were attempted right away on order:

It seems that shirleymcgrady is another similar site, but probably used as the main checkout for the other smaller sites.

The loading page domain from the payment was also created recently, 1 month ago, with one detection on VirusTotal.

Aftermath

A few days after I tried to check out, multiple other charges were attempted on the card:

The clear objective of the scam here is to have the victim make a payment for an item that will never be shipped, resulting in their personal and payment information being stolen. I can only imagine how many people were duped by these marketplaces, considering their popularity, and it must be paying off for the attackers.

With the evolving expertise of AI tools and technology in general, attackers can create these campaigns in a matter of seconds. This takes advantage of the average person’s trust by having a high-ranking site in the search results, images that look real (because they are real, and stolen), and a site that seems trustworthy enough for someone to enter their card details.

I would love to take this a step further and use a card with more funds to purchase a lower-cost item to see how different, if at all, the result would be. It is also fun to hunt down these different marketplaces and see how many you can find. Annoyingly, some of them use registrars that make it harder, not easier, to report abuse, but if anyone reading this would like to investigate this further, I would love to offer my help and see what we can do about it.

Indicators of Compromise

Marketplace Domains:
sydney.nbcsi[.]com
dryoff.onetoll[.]shop
popeye.fivedemo[.]shop
offup.japanhold[.]shop

Redirector Domains:
desidrivingschool[.]com
curencares[.]in
abralipedema.com[.]br

Payment Page Domains:
shirleymcgrady[.]com
yzoqrbiuar[.]asia