Hotlan trojan focuses on Hotmail, Gmail accounts
Spammers have moved from targeting Yahoo accounts to send out spam and have now focused their attention on Gmail and Hotmail.
Criminals have worked out a way of bypassing the captcha security that should prevent automated systems from creating operational email accounts from which to churn out spam, according to research carried out by anti-virus company BitDefender.
Captcha images are used to ensure that only people and not computers can create an email account. But a new trojan, called HotLan, gets around this by sending off the captcha image in an encrypted form back to a server controlled by a spammer. The image's characters are determined by the server and the solution is sent back to the trojan which inserts the characters into the form and creates the account. The account details are then sent back to the spammer to use to send out unsolicited junk mail.