Technology
This phishing attack uses some very retro technology to hide its payload – TechRadar
You don’t see Morse code used much these days – until now

A new phishing attack has been discovered making use of a form of communication that is more commonly associated with 19th-century radio signals than modern cyberattacks: Morse code. The campaign uses Morse code to enable malicious login forms to escape detection by anti-phishing email software.
As with many phishing campaigns, this one starts with a spam email purportedly containing a payment invoice. Attached to the email is an HTML file that is designed to look like an Excel spreadsheet. Typically,…
-
Noosa News22 hours ago
Western Queensland graziers begin grim stock count after catastrophic floods
-
Noosa News21 hours ago
Meet Chad Burgess, Pauline Hanson’s One Nation Party
-
Noosa News23 hours ago
Helicopter scrambles to site of air crash on K’gari
-
General20 hours ago
Tyler Wright soaks up Bells Beach return as poor conditions at Rip Curl Pro sees men’s opening round called off