The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW)
Phishing email wants you to renew iCloud. Please don't!


On occasion, I see phishing spam in my inbox, just like we all do. These emails 
usually look fairly realistic, and always have a link to click for me to renew 
an account or pay a balance -- but since I'm a moderately savvy fellow, I 
generally avoid falling for them, and you should too.

Well, this morning an email allegedly from Apple told me I need to renew my 
iCloud account. After making a few screenshots, I deleted the email. Why? It's 
a phishing attempt, and not even a good one. Here's how to tell it's fake.

At the top of the email, the sender's address is completely wrong. A real Apple 
email would come from the apple.com domain, not "rep.store.com". Likewise, the 
App Store has nothing to do with iCloud accounts.

Next, the subject line is "!Cloud" (exclamation point-Cloud), not "iCloud." 
It's doubtful that Apple would let a mass email go without a quick proofreading 
pass. And let's not forget the logo. Really? Have you ever seen the word 
"iCloud" oriented vertically on an Apple site or communication?

The paragraph explaining the "subscription was set to renew" is so full of fail 
it's laughable. First, it should be iCloud "subscriber," not "member." Next, 
why put PDT behind the date, when no time is listed? Third, have you ever seen 
an email from Apple that is written in sentence fragments? "Attempt to do so 
has failed." "Please take a minute."

The biggest tell in the message, however, is the instruction to "log in to 
MobileMe." MobileMe no longer exists; it was replaced by iCloud. The biggest 
way to tell that this is a lame attempt at phishing, though, is that link. 
Legitimate emails sometimes include a link to a login page, but for more 
sensitive ones (financial, security and such) the best practice is to ask users 
to self-navigate to a specific site.

This link doesn't pass the sniff test. If you hover your mouse pointer over the 
"LOGIN HERE TO UPDATE" link, you'll see from the tool tip that appears that the 
link directs you to a completely different site than iCloud.com:



Yep, you're going to be directed to stor-pple.com, a page that has nothing to 
do with Apple. This is an extremely poor phishing attempt, since it's not even 
trying to steal your login. Instead, it's flogging gift and flower sites.

The correct link for Apple ID and iCloud security transactions, in case you 
were wondering, is https://appleid.apple.com -- note the HTTPS protocol, which 
will help ensure a secure connection between your computer and Apple's 
webserver. (I'm not making that a "real" link for the reason noted above; if 
you ever need to reset your Apple ID, be sure to type the URL in yourself, in a 
browser you trust, on a computer you control. Maybe even disable Java and 
Flash, just for extra protection.)

Other favorite phishing emails come from miscreants pretending to be banks, 
credit unions, insurance companies and PayPal. Probably your best defense is to 
never click on a link in a suspicious email, or use the "hover over link" test 
to see where the link is really going. In this case, the attempt was 
transparently fake, but be sure to be cautious in all of your online 
activities. If you're checking email from your mobile device where it may be 
more difficult to assess the provenance of a link, wait until you get back to 
your computer if you have any doubt -- or just go straight to the relevant site 
yourself, and be safer.

Phishing email wants you to renew iCloud. Please don't! originally appeared on 
TUAW - The Unofficial Apple Weblog on Tue, 23 Oct 2012 10:35:00 EST. Please see 
our terms for use of feeds.

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