Spammers are ramping up their use of redirection techniques to try to get
around many anti-spam filters, a security firm warned today.
The latest flurry started about 10am Tuesday morning and by 11am represented
an estimated 4.3 per cent of the spam on the internet, according to anti-spam
firm Mail-Filters.com.
The technique, most commonly found with pharmaceutical spam, sends a user to
a web page and the user is then automatically redirected to another web page.
This technique is specifically designed to get around databases of destination
URLs that many anti-spam technologies rely upon.
"Spammers are constantly looking for solutions to avoid detection by
anti-spam technologies so that they can reach more eyeballs. We have seen a
substantial increase in spam messages being sent where the hyperlinks contained
in the messages are actually links to legitimate sites that are then redirected
to the spammer sites," said Ben Westbrook, CTO of Mail-Filters.
"Because the hyperlink appears to be to a legitimate site, most anti-spam
technologies will determine it is a legitimate message or create false-positives
by misidentifying legitimate email messages that contain links to these same
sites,” he added.
"This latest technique is coming in a flurry of messages that sometimes have
breaks in the sending – implying the spammer is evaluating techniques to see
what message receives the highest response rate."
A byproduct of this new spammer technique is that legitimate websites are
seeing increased traffic during the redirect process. This increased traffic
could create significant load problems for some sites. In addition, unassuming
websites that are being targeted by the spammers find themselves in the
embarrassing situation of being associated with spammers.
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