X
X
xandr0s2012-06-05 06:34:30
Malware
xandr0s, 2012-06-05 06:34:30

How to respond to this kind of spam?

An SMS came from the number +79312746607 (I send the syntax and punctuation in full accordance with the original):

Elena sent you an MMS preview at o-mms.org/1

The indent after the sender's name is more than one space, the absence of punctuation marks, some strange site for my operator and the presence of bitter experience suggests that not everything is clean here.
I check from a computer: the link is a redirect to deip.in/b/min/731/name from where name.jar is downloaded. Virustotal thinks like me - in the smssender archive .
I do not understand java, so I did not see anything useful in the source.
I could give up on everything that is happening and remain with the opinion “my hut is on the edge - I don’t know anything.” But for some reason I want to "report where it should be."
Actually, where to go? It seems like the operator can cover the sender's number (as I understand it, this is a St. Petersburg megaphone sending - I looked here) . What about websites?
Thanks in advance

Answer the question

In order to leave comments, you need to log in

5 answer(s)
N
northbear, 2012-06-05
@northbear

There is little that can be done here. This is a regular cell number used for mobile spam. Several phones with different SIM-kami cling to the computer and mailing is done by blocks of numbers. These numbers can be said to be disposable. As a rule, the mobile operator itself detects SIMs through which abnormally large SMS messages are sent and blocks them after a while. And spammers stupidly put in new SIM cards...
And you can't do anything with sites at all, especially outside the domain controlled by Russian registrars. Yes, and sites can also be disposable. DNS on the domain can substitute different ip-addresses. And one ip-address can host many different sites and not necessarily malicious ones.
The only reasonable topic is to find those who do it. But the game is not worth the candle. The articles there are cheap. Penalties too. Not to mention that it's not a fact that these guys are in Russia at all...
The best thing, it seems to me, is to ignore it.

A
anitspam, 2012-06-05
@anitspam

Write to the police department. Water wears away the stone.
habrahabr.ru/post/123414/ Checking SMS spam senders using an application to the prosecutor's office

R
rich, 2012-06-05
@rich

What to do with the site?
See whois .
A lot of useful information. Write to the hoster or domain owner.

M
Maxim Shishkin, 2012-06-05
@lsoul

To the police. With a statement about fraud. They will help you draw up a statement on the spot. Well, there will be more chances if you reduce the work of employees and describe all the available information to the maximum yourself, such as the functionality of the smsender and the consequences of its hmm ... use.

A
Artyom Tsyplakov, 2012-06-05
@grimich

About the number - to the operator
If you manage to find someone who can open the source code of the java applet and get a short number from there - also to the operator, find out whose number and then to the payment aggregator - they will close the account or severely fine those who send out such SMS
Sites to close, I think almost it makes no sense, because it costs almost nothing to generate new domains and buy cheap hosting, and the move takes about a day in time :)

Didn't find what you were looking for?

Ask your question

Ask a Question

731 491 924 answers to any question