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Rick Robinson

Job title:
CTO and vice president, eSoft

Areas of expertise:
Applied cryptography, PKI, identity and access management (authentication, authorization, and auditing), secure data transport, and system hardening and protection

Biography:
Rick Robinson has over ten years of experience in the computer security sector, including development of secure embedded computers, secure remote access, secure networking design, and secure system architecture. Throughout his career, he has regularly worked with Fortune 500 customers, providing security strategy and guidance. Robinson is a recipient of the prestigious Avaya Labs Cup Award and has been named on four USPTO patents in the area of computer security with additional USPTO application submissions in process. He possesses CISSP and ISSAP certifications from (ISC)2. In addition, he is an IEEE Senior Member, Past-Chair of the IEEE-Denver Section, Member of IEEE Security and Privacy Society, Member of the IEEE Computer Society, and Member of the IEEE Critical Infrastructure Protection Committee. Robinson holds BS and MS degrees in electrical engineering from Montana State University with an emphasis in computer engineering, and is completing his Executive MBA from the University of Colorado.

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Pharma-Fraud Continues to Dominate Spam

Have you taken a look inside your Spam folder recently?  Without a doubt you’ll find the folder full of pharmacy Spam, pitching everything from Cialis and Viagra to Vicodin and Hydrocodone.  The problem is almost none of the linked web sites are legitimate certified pharmacies.

Pharmacy Spam is delivered at an estimated 70% of global spam volumes, or 140 billion messages per day. These massive volumes are largely fueled by botnets such as Grum and Cutwail, creating all types of problems for business networks large and small.

These botnet operators are continually trying to find ways around Spam filters and web filters to earn money as part of the larger criminal operation behind these sites.  The latest attempt to get around these filters uses livejournal.com, a free blogging service, to link back to fraudulent pharmacy sites.  eSoft has seen similar attempts using other free blog services, including Windows Live Spaces.

In this example, a number of methods were used to get around Spam filtering technologies including using numbers and underscores (0rder_Now) to prevent the text from being detected as Spam.  A user following the link is taken to the Live Journal blog which then links them to the fraudulent online pharmacy.

In our research, the image link provided on each of the blogs linked back to many different “Canadian pharmacy” type pages.  eSoft has very good detection of pharma-fraud sites, finding hundreds of new sites per week.  Last year eSoft worked with the ThreatChaos blog to report on these sites.  The recent government crackdown has decreased the amount of sites coming online as compared to last year’s report, but certainly not stopped the operation or the related Spam.

It can be difficult to ascertain if an online pharmacy is legitimate or not.  The National Association of Boards of Pharmacy (NABP) provides some excellent safety information for buying medicine online.  Here are a few of the jaw dropping stats from their site.

83% do not require a valid prescription
42% offer foreign or non-FDA-approved drugs
55% do not provide a physical address
96% of sites reviewed are NOT recommended

At the time of writing, Live Journal has disabled the fake blogs we found using their service.  eSoft categorizes these fake blogs and the pharma-fraud sites they link to as "Pharmaceuticals" paired with “Phishing & Fraud” and “Spam” if the URL was detected in a Spam message.

Note that visiting these sites may result in stolen identity, delivery of fake products, further Spam and more.  eSoft strongly recommends sticking to lists of approved pharmacies and always using extreme caution and skepticism before following links in emails.

Posted 22/04/2010 by Rick Robinson

Tagged under:pharma-fraud,spam,fraud

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