SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Yahoo Inc (YHOO.O), is working with auction 
leader eBay Inc (EBAY.O) and its PayPal payments unit to block fake e-
mails to users purporting to be from eBay and PayPal, hoping to spur 
on an industry that has been slow to fight the scourge of so-called 
phishing attacks. 
 
EBay and PayPal have upgraded their computer systems to support an 
emerging technology standard known as DomainKeys invented by Yahoo 
that authenticates e-mail senders are who they say they are, allowing 
Yahoo to block fake e-mails.

The technology upgrade will be made available to Yahoo Mail users 
worldwide over the next several weeks, the company said.

"It is a big step forward for consumers in defense against the bad 
guys," John Kremer, vice president of Yahoo Mail, said in a phone 
interview.

Along with banks and pharmaceutical makers, eBay and PayPal are among 
the brands most targeted by phishers seeking to trick consumers into 
divulging personal information such as credit card or password data 
in order to commit financial fraud.

Over the past decade, phishing has been clogging the inboxes of e-
mail users worldwide with ever more sophisticated attempts to fool 
users into clicking on fraudulent sites or giving up personal 
financial details to commit fraud.

But to date, many of the defenses put forward by security software 
vendors and industry consortiums have failed to take hold with e-mail 
senders due to their complexity or costliness, or political in-
fighting over standards, leaving individual consumers always guessing 
which e-mail may be real or fake.

A PayPal official said Yahoo's system provides a way of automatically 
detecting potential phishing attacks without relying on the consumer 
to do anything new.

"If the consumer doesn't receive an email in their inbox then it is 
very hard for the phisher to victimize them," Michael Barrett, 
PayPal's chief information security officer. 

FEAR OF BLOCKING LEGITIMATE E-MAIL

Two camps have emerged among technology providers seeking to develop 
a coherent approach to identifying e-mail senders.

One backed by Yahoo and Cisco Systems Inc. (CSCO.O) along with AOL, 
Google Inc (GOOG.O), International Business Machines Corp (IBM.N), 
Sendmail and VeriSign Inc (VRSN.O) is the DomainKeys Identified Mail 
(DKIM) technology, which allows e-mail providers to identify the Web 
domain from which a sender has sent e-mail.

A second standard known as Sender Policy Network (SPF) has been led 
by Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O), which offers its own version of SPF known 
as Sender ID. SPF-based protections are used by Amazon, AOL, GoDaddy 
and eBay, which supports both DKIM and SPF.

Chenxi Wang, a security analyst with Forrester Research, said 
DomainKeys relies on more sophisticated cryptography than the 
Microsoft-supported approach. This sophistication can make DomainKeys 
harder for Web sites to install but offers greater long-term defense 
against phishing attacks, she said.

So far, most customers have installed sender authentication inside 
their e-mail systems as a monitoring tool but do not block e-mail for 
fear of false positives -- mistakenly treating legitimate customer e-
mail messages as phishing attempts.

However, despite the industry disagreements, an underlying consensus 
is emerging among software vendors, Internet service providers and 
corporate Web sites that digital e-mail signing in one form or 
another is the best shot to combat phishing.

"Two years ago if you asked companies whether they were using e-mail 
authentication, most people wouldn't have cared," Wang said. "Today 
if you ask most organizations if they think it is a good thing people 
would say, 'Yes."'

"The industry is slowly coming around," Wang said. "EBay and PayPal 
are some of the first to actively block unauthenticated e-mails."



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