Phishers are criminal, but they do make rational decisions about how to go about their work. They’re in it for the money, and they work to make their schemes as productive as possible while evading detection. To combat phishing we need to know what the phishers are doing, and how. Where is the phishing taking place? What companies are most vulnerable? Were the slew of new top-level domains a bonanza for phishers? By analyzing the phishing the authors have some answers, and those answers may surprise you.
This report seeks to understand trends and their significance by quantifying the scope of the global phishing problem. Specifically, these reports examines all the phishing attacks detected over specific time intervals. The data was collected by the Anti-Phishing Working Group, and supplemented with data from several phishing feeds, CNNIC, and private sources. The APWG phishing repository is the Internet’s most comprehensive archive of phishing and e-mail fraud activity. The authors are grateful to CNNIC and the Anti-phishing Alliance of China (APAC) for sharing their data with us.
APWG released its latest Domain Name Use and Trends report on June 26, 2017. Some Key Findings in this report:
Global Phishing Survey: Domain Name Use and Trends in 2H2014
Global Phishing Survey: Domain Name Use and Trends in 1H2014
Global Phishing Survey: Domain Name Use and Trends in 2H2013
Global Phishing Survey: Domain Name Use and Trends in 1H2013
Global Phishing Survey: Domain Name Use and Trends in 2H2012
Global Phishing Survey: Domain Name Use and Trends in 1H2012
Global Phishing Survey: Domain Name Use and Trends in 2H2011
Global Phishing Survey: Domain Name Use and Trends in 1H2011
Global Phishing Survey: Domain Name Use and Trends in 2H2010
Global Phishing Survey: Domain Name Use and Trends in 1H2010
Global Phishing Survey: Domain Name Use and Trends in 2H2009
Global Phishing Survey: Domain Name Use and Trends in 1H2009
Global Phishing Survey: Domain Name Use and Trends in 2H2008
Global Phishing Survey: Domain Name Use and Trends in 1H2008
Previous Phishing Survey Release: Trends in 2007