Parking tickets actually malware attacks in disguise

Thu Feb 5, 2009 12:02PM EST

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The last place anyone would expect to face a computer security attack is on the windshield of their car in the form of a parking ticket.

But that's the latest -- and intensely clever -- way that hackers are attempting to goad people into visiting infected websites and willingly install malware on their machines.

The scam is instantly clever once you hear how it works: Hackers print up phony "PARKING VIOLATION" notices and plaster them on cars parked on the street. The phony ticket directs the car's owner to visit a certain website, and of course the website in question (which largely seems to comprise of photos of badly parked cars) is a hack site which attempts to install malware on your PC.

Essentially what we have here is a phishing attack that takes place in the real world instead of via email. The use of fliers on parked cars is what's truly ingenious: A similar attack sent via postal mail would probably have minimal effect, but people are incredibly protective of their cars, and I imagine these windshield fliers will actually have a pretty good percentage of people typing in the URLs typed on them.

The good news -- for now -- is that the fliers are extremely crude, printed on yellow paper and offering nothing in the way of legal language that would compel a sophisticated and naturally skeptical reader to even visit the website in question. Like the earliest email phishing attacks, this attack may be simplistic, but it's probably a precursor of more advanced attacks to come. When hackers scan in real parking tickets and reprint them, replacing the URL printed there with one for a sophisticated attack site, then the sparks are going to start flying. (Installing malware is boring by comparison... I expect the real attacks will involve collecting money and hijacking credit cards and bank accounts wholesale.)

This appears to be a very limited attack (reported only in Grand Forks, North Dakota) for the time being, but it's a good idea to keep your skepticism handy next time you receive a parking "violation," just in case.

Comments on Parking tickets actually malware attacks in disguise

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  • 66 Posted by mcat_lh on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:13PM EDT Report Abuse

    I agree with the post regarding the hackers might be seen via cameras or witnesses. This is a quite clever scam, glad to have heard about it.

  • 68 Posted by ferismurder on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:59PM EDT Report Abuse

    Oh yeah and parking tickets don't have "official signatures of officers" on them where I live, abbsbox. (Abbsbox??????) Here, tickets are given out by the thousands and they are just pieces of paper which would be quite easy to replicate, with this article's "advice" and "instructions," (as many people have commented) or without it. I mean, come on, do you people really think these hackers need us to tell them to work on improving their counterfeits? I'm sure they already thought of that. It takes time to perfect an art. The purpose of this article is to alert people to the scam so they don't fall for it. So before you all go around calling everyone who fell for the scam or wrote about the scam "idiots," maybe you should get some more info on the subject.

  • 69 Posted by romanticnovel2006 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:49PM EDT Report Abuse

    My son recently got a ticket and looked it up on my laptop and I have the malware in it along with adware and I have to do a spyware scan all the time because it won't go away. Just in case some of you want to know where it is its in the c/documents files. Yesterday I had 1 infected file and today I have 2 hopefully it will change to zero. I send the report out every times its scanned and quarrintined.

  • 70 Posted by windskull on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:47PM EDT Report Abuse

    Time & money spent printing the bogus "tickets"and the legwork to place them on people`s cars alone has to be in the top 5 of the stupidest stunts ever tried not to mention the legal implications

  • 71 Posted by raymay26 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:31PM EDT Report Abuse

    there is also another virus antivirus or A360 and it is a pain to knock it.It is bogus and it will make you pay a fee and tell you to turn your firewall off,DON'T DO IT.

  • 72 Posted by glcollier on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:10PM EDT Report Abuse

    thats actually kinda funny, thing is, wouldnt you call and check on it and YELL at someone? most people dont just PAY without making a fuss. at least i wouldnt. also, are they passing these out in places where there are actual parking regs? they probably know what the rules are and when something isnt right.

  • 73 Posted by stevesommers56 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:43PM EDT Report Abuse

    The good thing about such a scam is that the perpetrator is probably living nearby.

  • 74 Posted by toddgaborick on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:14PM EDT Report Abuse

    Just throw the ticket away.It's extortion to have to pay it in the first place.Remember the cops have to go after the good people because they can't get the bad ones.Thats also why they have incorporated zero tolorence policies in public education in order to condition generations to become masochist's.

  • 75 Posted by mattsk4000 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:11PM EDT Report Abuse

    By PC they mean windows right. I hope that I don't have to worry on my Mac.

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