A new Google Docs phishing scam is making its way around the internet. To understand how this very sophisticated attempt works and how you could be at risk, picture the following:
You are looking through your email when all of a sudden, your good friend Stan Perimeter has shared a Google Doc with you. Excited to see what your friend thought was important enough to put it in a Google Doc, you start to open it. Maybe you are going to collaborate on something amazing.
You quickly click the ‘Open in Docs’ link, and you are taken to a secure page where you can log in to your Google account and see the document. You type in your user name and password and submit. You are met with a Google Doc of either gibberish or one that is simply blank.
In the mean time, your email address and password have been submitted to a malware script, hosted unknowingly by a random third party. Your Google username and password have now been swiped by this phishing attack.
See this email?
See, that is not a Google address or any address that you know. DELETE IT. Do not open it, do not pass go, do not collect $200.
If you have fallen victim and filled out the form, immediately change your Google password.
Note: The phishing attempt seems to be targeting members of the media and schools at the moment but that could change quickly.
Originally published at Absolute Technology Solutions.