A "vast phishing attack" that attempts to capture the credit card information of Apple customers was launched on Christmas day, according to a report from Mac security-software company Intego.
In a posting on its Mac Security blog, Intego says that the attack is an attempt to fool Apple customers into clicking on a link under the guise of updating the billing information of their Apple accounts.
If you click on the link in the message, you will be taken to a realistic-looking sign-in page; then, after entering your Apple ID and password, you'll be taken to a page asking you to update your account profile, notably entering your credit card information. Again, this page looks realistic, and many of the elements it contains are taken from Apple's own web pages.
Intego reports that the messages are being sent with the subject "Apple update your Billing Information" from a spoofed e-mail address of "appleid@id.apple.com," though of course future emails from the same source might vary somewhat.
If you hover your mouse over the hyperlink in the (impressively forged) e-mail address, you'll see a floating box that reveals the real destination of that link: the telltale chain of four numbers that specifies a numeric IP address, rather than a link to somewhere within the apple.com domain. As Intego rightly points out, "if it's not something.apple.com (it could be
www.apple.com, store.apple.com, or something else), then it's bogus."
In addition to hovering your cursor over any links before you click on them, another way to stay secure is to enter links yourself in your browser rather than click on them in emails. If you type store.apple.com into your browser, you know it's a legitimate site. If you're using Safari any secure connection to Apple (i.e., any URL beginning with https: rather than http:) will show a green verification item in the top right corner of the address bar. (There are similar indications in other browsers.) And no legitimate site will ask for personal information, especially of the credit-card variety, without using a secure connection.
This isn't the first such scam posing as an e-mail from Apple recently. In a less sophisticated attack earlier this month, a fake MobileMe message requested that users send an e-mail containing their username and password.
In general, you should be skeptical about any e-mail messages, however legitimate they appear to be, that ask you to go to a website or compose an e-mail containing personal data.