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SBI customers hit by text phishing scam - Here's how fraudsters operate

Several users of the State Bank of India (SBI) have been targeted with a phishing scam where hackers have flooded them with suspicious text messages, requesting them to redeem their SBI credit points worth Rs 9,870.

Edited by: IANS New Delhi Published : Mar 01, 2021 16:47 IST, Updated : Mar 01, 2021 16:51 IST
SBI customers, sbi text phising scam, sbi bank fraud, sbi, sbi bank,
Image Source : PTI

SBI customers hit by text phising scam - Here's how fraudsters operate

Several users of the State Bank of India (SBI) have been targeted with a phishing scam where hackers have flooded them with suspicious text messages, requesting them to redeem their SBI credit points worth Rs 9,870.

The link associated with the text messages redirects the user to a fake website and on the landing page, the user is asked to submit personal information along with sensitive financial details like card number, expiry date, CVV and Mpin in a 'State Bank of India Fill Your Details' form.

According to the investigation by New Delhi-based think tank CyberPeace Foundation along with Autobot Infosec Private Ltd, the website collects data directly without any verification and is registered by a third party instead of having the registrant organisation name of State Bank of India, making it all the more suspicious.

"Moreover, according to SBI, they never communicate with their customers via SMS or emails containing links with regard to the user's account. Any reputed banking entity also does not use Wordpress like CMS technologies on their official website for security reasons," the foundation said.

The personal information sought on the malicious website is name, registered mobile number, email, email password and date of birth.

After the form is submitted, the user is directed to a "thank you" page.

"The domain name of the website can be traced to India, and the registrant state was found to be Tamil Nadu," the report mentioned.

According to the report, it was observed that the form takes user inputs without performing basic validation of data type.

For example, the registered mobile number field, which should only accept numerical values also accepts text input. This can also be confirmed from the source code, where the input type for the field is mentioned as 'text' instead of 'number' or 'tel'.

"The email password field shows the entered password in clear text instead of keeping the characters hidden. A similar source code observation is noted," it added.

"The card number field accepts an infinite number of digits instead of only 16 digits, which SBI cards usually have. All these instances of negligence clearly indicate bad coding practice," the foundation said.

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