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Avoid that browser button!

Fraudulent browser push notifications as a means of phishing and advertising are gaining popularity, with the share of users hit by the problem growing month-on-month this year. As shown by recent Kaspersky research, the monthly number of users affected has grown from 1,722,545 in January to 5,544,530 in September 2019. In total, during the first nine months of 2019, Kaspersky products protected more than 14 million of users from attempts to allow websites to show unwanted notifications. With essentially every web user being a potential victim, this threat, although unsophisticated, requires additional attention.

Browser push notifications were introduced several years ago as a useful tool that kept readers informed with regular updates, but today they are often used to bombard website visitors with unsolicited adverts or even encourage them to download malicious software. Useful user-friendly features, such as push notifications, are easy-to-use instruments for scams based on social engineering techniques, and therefore their growing popularity is not entirely unexpected. In light of the recent calendar invitations scam detected by Kaspersky, the company’s experts decided to dive deeper into push notification scams and phishing to find out how this tool can be abused.

Since a user’s consent is required in order to start sending notifications, attackers have come up with multiple, often ‘out of the box’ ways to trick and force people to sign up for subscriptions. The detected options include:

Number of Kaspersky products users that have been hit by ad and scam push notifications, January – September 2019

After gaining user’s consent, attackers start bombarding them with messages. The least harmful (and yet the most popular) options are clickbait ads on sensitive social topics, while others include scam notifications – like lottery wins, offers of money in exchange for completing a survey or something similar. Schemes that are more sophisticated are targeted at milking money out of users using phishing techniques.

An example of a phishing notification impersonating a Microsoft Windows system update

A common scheme uses messages disguised as system notifications, such as virus infection alerts. These redirect users to phishing copies of trusted websites and then prompt users to download various paid “PC cleaning” utilities. However, the potential of push notifications being used for such scams is not limited to just that.

“We have seen a rise in push notifications being abused, as attackers continue to creatively adapt new technologies in order to trick users. Because this feature is so widespread and easy to take advantage of through social engineering schemes, we have seen a rapid growth in the number of affected users. Push notifications are a very useful tool for users that help them stay on top of important things that interest them. Yet, as with anything on the internet, users have to remain attentive and cautious when interacting with pop-ups and only allow push notifications if they are completely sure the alerts are useful and come from trusted sources,” said Artemy Ovchinnikov, security researcher at Kaspersky. 

To avoid receiving annoying notifications or scam ads, users can follow a few simple recommendations:

Read more on the topic in the Kaspersky Unwanted notifications report on Securelist.

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