Email Phishing Attackers Are Pretending To Be The IRS

Emotet is in the news again according to the latest information from email security firm Cofense.  Emotet is notorious for spreading via phishing campaigns and this latest phishing campaign sees them impersonating the IRS.

By all outward appearances, the emails look legitimate. The Emotet gang knows that with so many people feeling harried during tax season, potential victims are much less likely to look closely at incoming emails that claim to have tax documents since they’re expecting tax documents anyway.

While the particulars vary from one email to the next, the general gist of emails associated with this campaign goes as follows. “Hi, we’re the IRS, and we’re contacting your business with some completed tax forms,” or, in some variants, “We’re contacting you with some tax forms you need to fill out and send back to us.”

Again, given the timing of tax season, this is not at all out of the ordinary. A surprising percentage of email recipients are opening the included attachments.

Simply opening the emails won’t doom you, but if you enter the password required to unlock the file attached to the email, you will doom yourself. Emotet will be installed in the background along with whatever additional malicious payload the hackers want to inflict on you.

In addition to that the malware will rifle through your address book, absconding with the email addresses belonging to your contacts. It does this so it can use those addresses in future reply-chain attacks, thus extending the longevity of the campaign.

There’s no good defense against this kind of attack except for vigilance.  The standard email defenses apply here.  Never open an attachment from someone you don’t know.  In cases where the recipient seems to be a government agency, call to verify that they have, sent you something that needs your attention, and examine the email closely.

Be careful out there.

File Explorer May Get Tabs In Windows 11

Are you a Windows Insider?  If so, be aware that the company is testing a “hidden” new feature you’re probably going to love.

It’s a small change but its impact is enormous. The feature is the Tabbed File Explorer!

The experimental feature must be explicitly enabled but once it is it works a lot like tabbed browsing does.

If you right click on a drive, you’ll see a new menu option “open in a new tab.”  Left clicking that option will open the drive in a new tab adjacent to the current File Explorer tab. That part of the new feature is working smoothly, but the company hasn’t yet worked out the particulars of reordering tabs.

It’s worth mentioning that not all hidden features wind up being officially released features. The company has said exactly nothing about it so this may or may not wind up being an integral part of the Windows 11 user experience.

We certainly hope so because it’s a spectacularly useful addition.

If you’re interested in playing around with it, here’s what you need to do:

First, join the Dev channel of the Windows Insider program and install the latest build.  Then download the Vive Tool which enables hidden developer features in both Windows 10 and Windows 11.

Open an “Elevated Command Prompt” and make your way to the folder where the Vive tool has been extracted.

Finally, type the following command:

  • vivetool addconfig 34370472 2

After you enter this commend, you’ll get a confirmation response from the Vive tool.  At that point, you’ll need to restart your computer to start experimenting with the tabbed File Explorer.

When you’ve finished testing the feature or if you decide it’s not to your liking, simply enter the following command (same process as described above):

  • vivetool addconfig 34370472 0

Restart your computer and the tabbed browsing feature will no longer be enabled.

It’s a fun, cool feature and you’ll almost certainly enjoy playing around with it.

 You May See Ads For Microsoft Products With Windows 11

Microsoft may have inadvertently signaled that they are soon going to reincorporate ads into Microsoft 11, which is going to please exactly no one.

In the most recent Windows Insiders build, third party ads were displayed but only briefly. They vanished as of the next update.

The company responded to the angry inquires that the sudden appearance of ads caused with the following statement: “This was an experimental banner that was not intended to be published externally and was turned off.”

That’s all well and good, but the simple truth is that if the company is even considering turning the banner back on legions of Windows users are going to break out the torches and pitchforks.

This isn’t something that Microsoft should even be considering experimenting with because Windows isn’t the only OS in town.  Google, Apple, and maybe even Linux would happily soak up Microsoft’s market share if the company were to decide to go that route.

Unfortunately, it wouldn’t be unprecedented.  Microsoft has run ads across other previous iterations of Windows in various places including the Taskbar, the start menu, and the lock screen.

Every time they’ve done it, it has generated considerable backlash.

The key difference between then and now is that there are other gigantic tech companies who are well-positioned to take market share from Microsoft and they would absolutely not hesitate to take advantage of any mistakes the company might make.

Windows 11 has the potential to be a game-changing OS. If Microsoft gets the launch right, it will secure the company’s future for years to come.  Unfortunately, as this recent gaffe demonstrated they are balanced on the edge of a knife.  It is highly doubtful that their user base would tolerate ad displays in the new OS so the company needs to tread very carefully here.

Clipchamp Will Soon Replace Movie Maker For Windows 11

If you’re an early adopter playing with the Windows 11 builds as they come out and you are a “Windows Insider,” then you probably already know this.

In the latest build, users were treated to a raft of new improvements and enhancements including a new Windows 11 video editor called Clipchamp.  The build with the Clipchamp addition is 22572 and is now available in the Dev Channel.

The Windows 11 Development Team had this to say about the new feature:

“Clipchamp is equipped with all the basic tools you’d expect, like trimming and splitting, as well as more pro-style features like transitions and animated text. For real-time content capture, there are also built-in webcam and screen recorders.

But what really sets Clipchamp apart from other video editors is its timeline. We’ve kept all the best parts of timeline editing — the flexibility, the ability to fine tune details — and done away with the rest.”

The new software comes with a stock library of more than a million royalty-free videos, audio tracks, images, and a powerful text-to-speech generator with support for more than 70 different languages. The generator will be powered by the company’s Azure technology.  Anyone making use of the new tool can easily connect with users’ OneDrive accounts to import files or save videos quickly, safely, and securely.

It’s a significant change and according to the company, it may well be a permanent one.  Knowing that Microsoft invested significant resources into Clipchamp, there’s very little reason to keep Movie Maker around. However, if the company faces an open rebellion like they did when they tried to retire Paint, it may be possible to change their mind.

Users should get used to the idea that there’s a new sheriff in town when it comes to video editing in Windows called Clipchamp!

This Malware Phishing Campaign Hijacks Email Conversations

Hackers have been using social engineering tricks to get their malicious code onto the systems of unsuspecting victims. This has been happening for almost as long as the internet has been around.

It’s one of the most common tactics in use today, primarily because it’s so simple and effective.

Trial and error have shown hackers that users are more likely to trust an email if it looks like it’s part of an ongoing conversation. So, they often try to spoof that. Unfortunately, spoofing an ongoing conversation is a lot harder to do than it might first seem. As technology has advanced, they’ve hit on an even better solution.

Instead of spoofing a conversation, why not hijack one?

That’s right, hackers now have the capability to hijack a legitimate and ongoing conversation between you and another individual and lace that conversation with malware.

Since the conversation is one the user is currently having naturally, that individual will trust any links or attached files that might be a part of the conversation. That translates into a greater likelihood that those links will be clicked, or those files will be opened.

Right now the main source for this innovative attack variant is the group spreading Qakbot.

Here’s how it works:

Qakbot spreads via infected Windows computers.  The malware downloads a payload which scans for email accounts.  It finds them and steals login credentials while other automated tools are busy going through the user’s inbox and sending out phishing emails. They do this by using the “reply all” function when it finds an existing email thread.

The original message is quoted in the reply, which makes it look that much more authentic.

After the original message, the bot will append a few lines of text that contains a request to “look at an attachment” which is often a zip file.  Anyone not paying attention is bound to open the file without thinking, and you know the rest of the story.

Keep this one high on your radar, it’s particularly sneaky.