Coronavirus is the new pick for cybercriminals. With the virus spreading and affecting people around the world, cybercriminals are looking to exploit users’ curiosity on the web. According to a new CheckPoint report, the malicious rate of the coronavirus-related domains is 50% higher than the overall rate of all domains registered at the same time period. The rate is much higher than the seasonal themes such as Valentine’s Day, the report added.
“Since January 2020, based on Check Point Threat Intelligence, there have been over 4,000 coronavirus-related domains registered globally. Out of these websites, 3% were found to be malicious and an additional 5% are suspicious. Coronavirus- related domains are 50% more likely to be malicious than other domains registered in the same period, and also higher than recent seasonal themes such as Valentine’s day,” said the study.
The security firm said that many domains were aimed at phishing. It also pointed out that some websites are trying to scam users in the name of selling face masks, vaccines, home tests that can detect the coronavirus. Researchers also identified a widespread coronavirus-themed phishing campaign targeted at Italian users. Italy is one of the worst affected nations by the virus.