We are seeing more reports from organizations being targeted by what could be called an 'altered invoice scam'. This type of scam is not new but has gained more prominence lately. The basic outline of the scam looks something like this:
To illustrate this scam, what follows is based on a real example that we investigated, except that characters and other details have been fictionalized.
Note, we didn't get details of how the initial mailbox was compromised, although we know from other similar scams that credentials were obtained through phishing emails such as the one below, which is included here to show the type of phishing that could have been involved.
Clicking this link would have led to a fake Microsoft credential harvesting page.
Another way credentials can be obtained is through keylogging malware, such as Java-based Remote Access Tools (RATs), that have been similarly spammed out by the attacker.
Once the scammer has some credentials, they login to a mailbox, set mail forwarding and start monitoring messages. For this example, here is the initial real email between Susan, Procurement Manager at Acme, and John, Sales Manager at Widgets-R-Us, asking for an invoice:
From: Susan Jones <s.jones@acme.com>
To: John Smith <j.smith@widgetsrus.com>
Subject: Re: Request copy of invoice
Date: 28 August 2018 6:47:50
Dear John
We request copy of invoices for us to process payment.
Susan Jones
Manager, Procurement
Acme Corp
The scammer, monitoring the email traffic, notices the request and jumps in less than 30 minutes later with a spoofed email to John, requesting an invoice with urgency. There are two approaches the attacker can take here. They can delete the original request and substitute it for their own, or they can quickly follow up the original request with a new one. This spoofed message originates from a completely different free webmail platform that the scammer is using. Note also the different Reply-To: address.
From: Susan Jones <s.jones@acme.com>
Reply-To: Susan Jones <s.jones_acme.com@emailadmin.com>
To: John Smith <j.smith@widgetsrus.com>
Subject: Re: Request copy of invoice
Date: 28 August 2018 7:10:30
Dear John
Please attach copy of invoice and send asap.
Susan Jones
Manager, Procurement
Acme Corp
John receives this request for an invoice and replies to it, not noticing the different Reply-To: address causing his reply to be sent directly to the attacker. Below is the email from John to the attacker, to which is attached the real invoice.
From: John Smith <j.smith@widgetsrus.com>
To: Susan Jones <s.jones_acme.com@emailadmin.com>
Subject: Re: Request copy of invoice
Date: 28 August 2018 7:46:15
Dear Susan
Please see attached invoice as requested.
John Smith
Sales Manager
Widgets-R-Us
The Invoice is a PDF with the true remittance details that may look something like this.
The scammer receives the PDF and recreates it almost exactly with the same layout, images, and invoice details. The only difference is the Remittance Instructions, which may look something like this:
The attacker then crafts another spoofed email, attaches the fake invoice, then sends it to Susan. Note the different Reply-To address with a mis-spelled domain (missing 'r') that the attacker has registered. If Susan happens to follow up with more questions, then those replies will go directly to the attacker.
From: John Smith <j.smith@widgetsrus.com>
To: Susan Jones <s.jones@acme.com>
Reply-To: John Smith <j.smith@widgetsus.com>
Subject: Re: Request copy of invoice
Date: 29 August 2018 10:15:25
Dear Susan
Please see attached invoice as requested.
John Smith
Sales Manager
Widgets-R-Us
Susan receives the invoice and, fully expecting it, arranges for payment - not noticing anything unusual like the remittance details were for a bank in Estonia.
Voila! There goes $50K. It seems the easiest way to steal money is to ask for it. Which is why the scammers have jumped on this particular bandwagon – there is a strong sense of realism at all stages. Only the more detailed-oriented would pick up anything unusual.
About two weeks later John is asking Susan questions as to why the invoice was not paid, and the scammer is thinking of what new model of BMW to purchase. The moral of the story is do not buy cars for scammers!