Open source tool aimed at penetration testers lets them customize phishing attacks on their organizations

A researcher next month will unleash a new, free open-source tool for conducting targeted phishing attacks in-house.

Targeted phishing attacks, also known as spear-phishing, are increasingly becoming the hacker’s method of choice for infecting and/or infiltrating a specific organization. These attacks can be eerily convincing, often using identical message footers and IP addresses as those within an organization, and can easily dupe unsuspecting users into opening them and following their malicious links. Just last week, a spear-phishing attack on New Zealand-based University of Otago resulted in an estimated 1.55 million spams generated from the university’s server within 60 hours. (See Spear Phishing Attack Unleashes 1.5M Spam Messages.)

A recent report from iDefense Labs found that over 15,000 corporate victims in the past 15 months have been hit by spear phishing attacks.

The new Lunker phishing attack and audit tool is aimed at the penetration tester, so it comes with some advanced hacking features, and doesn’t use canned scenarios, but rather templates that can be customized. “Spear phishing is a huge risk. You’ve really got to start testing for this,” says Joshua Perrymon, who developed the Lunker tool. “You’ve got to start measuring the effectiveness of your [organization’s] security awareness and policies.”

Last month, boutique security firm Intrepidus Group rolled out a software-as-a-service offering called PhishMe that lets companies find the weakest links in their targeted phishing defense, as well as give their users a real-world taste of just what a spear-phishing attack looks and feels like. (See 'PhishMe' Tool Lets Businesses Spear-Phish Themselves.)

Lunker is aimed at the in-house hacker or outside researcher, Perrymon, CEO of PacketFocus, says. It includes an email reconnaissance feature that crawls the major search engines for corporate email accounts, but can also use lists provided by the would-be targeted organization. It also probes the target for weak links and suggests the most effective template for an attack, based on the emails and other analysis it has conducted on the target. And it comes with monitoring features that analyze the phished user’s actions in response to the phishing email.

“I decided to make this open source,” Perrymon says, so organizations can get see how easy these attacks can be done and to find ways to secure themselves. “There’s no reason for the bad guys” to only have that knowledge and ability, he says.

Perrymon will release the new spear-phishing tool next month at the OWASP Conference, where it will be bundled with the OWASP LiveCD, an application security testing set of tools. He’ll also provide a stand-alone version of Lunker sometime after that.

Another feature he hopes to add to Lunker is some user training features. “But the biggest need is for organizations to understand these attacks first, so the big push has been getting it to work for pen-testers,” Perrymon says. Lunker runs on PHP-based Web servers.

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About the Author(s)

Kelly Jackson Higgins, Editor-in-Chief, Dark Reading

Kelly Jackson Higgins is the Editor-in-Chief of Dark Reading. She is an award-winning veteran technology and business journalist with more than two decades of experience in reporting and editing for various publications, including Network Computing, Secure Enterprise Magazine, Virginia Business magazine, and other major media properties. Jackson Higgins was recently selected as one of the Top 10 Cybersecurity Journalists in the US, and named as one of Folio's 2019 Top Women in Media. She began her career as a sports writer in the Washington, DC metropolitan area, and earned her BA at William & Mary. Follow her on Twitter @kjhiggins.

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