Criminals are using fake domains and emails to pose as CEOs, and convince employees to send them money, in some cases millions of dollars. The FBI calls this scam business email compromise (BEC), or CEO fraud. In January 2015, the FBI warned that cyber thieves stole nearly $215 million from businesses in the previous 14 months through such scams, which start when crooks spoof or hijack the email accounts of business executives or employees.
It is easy and cheap. There is no barrier to entry for criminals to set up new domains. And, they can set them up using a completely anonymous throw away email address so it can’t traced back. And, it’s free, because domain issuers often run promos for free, 30-day trials. BEC has been reported in all 50 states and 80 countries.
How to get started:
Case in point: Vistaprint offers a month’s free web hosting with the available domain of your choice plus an email account that uses said domain. They do not verify the requestor’s identity, nor charge the card used to sign up. This offer has proven to be very attractive to fraudsters. They can instantly stand up a domain and email account and immediately begin perpetrating fraud. Our research shows that the average time between setting up the domain and email, to sending the first fraudulent email is minutes.
Here’s an example of how it works: criminals begin by sending a fake CEO email request to the accounting department for an immediate wire transfer payment for an urgent purchase. The request will include wire transfer payment information for a bank account controlled by the criminal. The accounts payable clerk receives the meticulously crafted CEO email request with only one likely undiscernible error—the company email address is missing a letter. There is a high likelihood that accounting will ask for more information, but enough transactions of this type are completed without any questions from accounts payable to make this scam profitable.
And even if it is questioned initially, a confident fraudster can manage the follow-up email conversation well enough to get the money transferred. Whether the scam succeeds or fails, the stolen credit card and disposable email address make tracking down the perpetrator difficult.
A couple of successful scams include:
With all of the criminal activity perpetrated via domain names and email, one would think that certain safeguards would be put in place. Some thoughts:
Registration of fake domains by fraudsters and hackers is a real problem that is relatively easy to solve and even a very simplistic fix would prevent a great deal of crime. The BEC scam is just one example of how criminals use fake, free domains to perpetrate crimes. One would hope that domain vendors take notice of this issue, and begin to put policies and processes in place to help stamp out this type of criminal activity.