main

Microsoft, eBAY, PayPal, Visa Launch Phish Report Network

junkam   on 15 February 2005 - 12:14 · 18 comments & 3409 views

Advertisement (Why?)
WholeSecurity, the leading provider of behavioral, on-demand endpoint security solutions, today introduced the Phish Report Network, the Internet industry’s first worldwide anti-phishing aggregation service. Initial participants in the new business service include Microsoft, eBay, PayPal, and Visa. The Phish Report Network allows any company being victimized by phishing attacks to immediately and securely report fraudulent Web sites to a central database operated by WholeSecurity. Other companies subscribing to the Phish Report Network can then access the database or receive real-time notifications of known phishing sites, enabling them to more effectively protect consumers by blocking these sites in their user-facing security applications.

View: Phish Report Network
News source: Aviran's Place


Neowin spoke to LokiTorrent's owner, Lowkee, a few weeks ago, as the legal battle was just getting underway. "I run a completely legal website that the MPAA or anyone else has no right to force me to close," he said. "In just the past few weeks, the MPAA has forced the shutdown of many other BitTorrent sites which were set up to do nothing more than allow people to share what they wished. It will be a dark day when we roll over to let organizations such as the RIAA and MPAA make our freedom of speech laws for us.

"Piracy is a byproduct of peer sharing," he added. When peer-to-peer software is being written, there aren't 10 developers wringing their hands together over how much software and music people can steal from those who make a living selling it. Peer sharing is used to allow people who don't have the financial funding of the MPAA and RIAA to share their works, for free, to a worldwide audience without the massive costs of bandwidth punishing them for being popular."

Remember, for all its faults (including the odd lawsuit against 12-year-olds, or dead people), the Recording Industry Association of America did do one thing differently. It waited until there was a mainstream, easily-available and legal alternative to the P2P networks before it launched its legal actions. Napster, iTunes and all have taken off - they may not yet have the same volume of downloads as services like Kazaa did in their hey-day, but it's growing all the time, and surely it won't be that much longer until legal music downloads actually do take over.

The movie business, however, is nowhere near this level. Napster has mentioned it plans to get into it at some point in the future, but no dates have been mentioned yet. There are a few services up and running now, but many of them are (once again) American-only - and others have a small selection of films that most of us have never heard of. Hardly that great of an incentive when a quick search will yield the latest blockbuster, watchable within just a few hours. Link up your computer to your TV and a decent surround sound system, and it's pretty much impossible to tell it apart from the real thing.

I have no doubt legal movie downloads - whether they're pay-per-view, download and keep, or a 24-hour "licence" to watch (pretty much like getting a movie out of Blockbuster or somewhere else at the moment) will come. However, it seems that it's still quite a long way off. More and more people have broadband, more and more people are wanting to use it to its full potential. More and more people are discovered the wonders of downloading films quickly and easily; until there are some viable, legal alternatives, the MPAA is facing an uphill struggle in shutting down BitTorrent trackers.

Neowin's Tom Graham contributed to this report

View: Neowin forums discussion
View: BBC News coverage

It is important to note that Neowin does not endorse or support piracy of any kind; members posting links or detailed information will face severe action.

Post a comment · Send to friend Comments · There are 18 additional comments
(3 replies) #1 oscyaki on 15 Feb 2005 - 12:24
About time. Someone had to do it. It's now beyond a joke.
#1.1 threedaysdwn on 15 Feb 2005 - 14:08
I don't understand. Phish broke up. What's left to report on?
#1.2 bucko on 15 Feb 2005 - 17:10
f-r-e-e-i-p-o-d-s

should be shut down, the most annoying site ever.
#1.3 _Dom_ on 15 Feb 2005 - 17:25
erm am i missing something freeipods dosnt have anything to do with this. freeipods is a pyramid scheme thats about it
#2 david.rothera on 15 Feb 2005 - 12:52
Yes. But will this new website make any effect to the amount of phish attacks?
#3 Redfox Mcbeth on 15 Feb 2005 - 13:24
Lets hope so.
#4 Autoexec on 15 Feb 2005 - 13:25
Its not even free for companies to sign up to.
(1 reply) #5 forster on 15 Feb 2005 - 13:38
QUOTE
You simply sign the Phish Report Network subscriber agreement, pay a nominal annual network maintenance fee, and then begin accessing the Network’s central database as a Sender or Receiver. It’s that easy!


One would have hoped that submitting phishing sites would have been free and anonymous - I get many different emails from alledged sites wanting eBay and Paypal information, it'd be nice if I could just post into a form, perhaps the address of the fake site, email headers and a small explanation, rather than have to 'pay' to do it.
#5.1 shao on 15 Feb 2005 - 16:50
anonymous reporting could reduce the validity of the sites that are reported if the people behind phishing scams decide they want to fill the database with innocent sites / ip's. Pretty much like we see the mpaa doing with kazaa.

it's in the best interest of banks and financial organisations hit by phishing scams to sign up for this and protect their customers. therefore the small investment in subscriptions should outweigh the potential loss caused by phishing.
#6 Steffan on 15 Feb 2005 - 14:04
edit:

<<snip>>

after reading the site a little closer, it looks like only companies will have to pay to submit and receive info on phishing emails.
(2 replies) #7 versiondub on 15 Feb 2005 - 14:06
gmail has a "report phishing" button, YOUR email service should too!
#7.1 SquareSoft0 on 15 Feb 2005 - 21:38
You sound like a commercial, an utterly retarded one.
(I like Gmail, your post sucked)
#7.2 versiondub on 15 Feb 2005 - 23:14
aww, you've ruined my dreams of becoming the shakespeare of the 21st century. Oh well, I guess you still have hope, keep on posting on neowin!
#8 Hankyone on 15 Feb 2005 - 15:19
was about time

Last edited by 48841 on 15 Feb 2005 - 15:28
#9 Zepolcire on 15 Feb 2005 - 17:56
I would hope that all the major Credit Cards company join. Then again, you know they would find some charge to pass on to the customers to cover the cost of being a memeber.
#10 Quick Reply on 16 Feb 2005 - 01:47
Can't wait for a PRN Browser Extensions for Mozilla/Firefox & Internet Explorer/Shells
#11 jivemastert on 16 Feb 2005 - 06:09
i love how companies call it by the "slang" term. it would be weird to hear someone from visa say "we are going to help protect against phishing." just as it would be weird for someone from a telephone company to say "we caught some kids phreaking the other night."
#12 Lancing on 17 Feb 2005 - 00:52
Too bad it costs money for webhosts like me. Forget about it, FraudGate it is, heh.

Although I do have a big headache with phishers signing up for my hosting to send out the emails.

Commenting has either been disabled on this article or you are not logged in. Click here to login or register, its free!

Note: Anonymous commenting is disabled in order to keep the quality of responses to a high standard.

Advertisement (Why?)