Social engineering, in the context of information security, is the psychological manipulation of people into performing actions or divulging confidential information.
 This differs from social engineering within the social sciences, which 
does not concern the divulging of confidential information. A type of confidence trick
 for the purpose of information gathering, fraud, or system access, it 
differs from a traditional "con" in that it is often one of many steps 
in a more complex fraud scheme.
It has also been defined as "any act that influences a person to take an action that may or may not be in their best interests."
Information Security Culture
Employee
 behavior can have a big impact on information security in 
organizations. Cultural concepts can help different segments of the 
organization work effectively or work against effectiveness towards 
information security within an organization. "Exploring the Relationship
 between Organizational Culture and Information Security Culture" 
provides the following definition of information security culture: "ISC 
is the totality of patterns of behavior in an organization that 
contribute to the protection of information of all kinds."
Andersson and Reimers (2014) found that employees often do not 
see themselves as part of the organization Information Security "effort"
 and often take actions that ignore organizational information security 
best interests.
  Research shows Information security culture needs to be improved 
continuously. In "Information Security Culture from Analysis to Change,"
 authors commented that "it's a never ending process, a cycle of 
evaluation and change or maintenance." They suggest that to manage 
information security culture, five steps should be taken: 
Pre-evaluation, strategic planning, operative planning, implementation, 
and post-evaluation.
- Pre-Evaluation: to identify the awareness of information security within employees and to analyse current security policy.
- Strategic Planning: to come up with a better awareness-program, we need to set clear targets. Clustering people is helpful to achieve it.
- Operative Planning: set a good security culture based on internal communication, management-buy-in, and security awareness and training program.
- Implementation: four stages should be used to implement the information security culture. They are commitment of the management, communication with organizational members, courses for all organizational members, and commitment of the employees.
Techniques and Terms
All social engineering techniques are based on specific attributes of human decision-making known as cognitive biases.
 These biases, sometimes called "bugs in the human hardware", are 
exploited in various combinations to create attack techniques, some of 
which are listed below. The attacks used in social engineering can be 
used to steal employees' confidential information. The most common type 
of social engineering happens over the phone. Other examples of social 
engineering attacks are criminals posing as exterminators, fire marshals
 and technicians to go unnoticed as they steal company secrets.
One example of social engineering is an individual who walks into
 a building and posts an official-looking announcement to the company 
bulletin that says the number for the help desk has changed. So, when 
employees call for help the individual asks them for their passwords and
 IDs thereby gaining the ability to access the company's private 
information.
Another example of social engineering would be that the hacker contacts 
the target on a social networking site
 and starts a conversation with the target. Gradually the hacker gains 
the trust of the target and then uses that trust to get access to 
sensitive information like password or bank account details.
Social engineering relies heavily on the 6 principles of influence established by Robert Cialdini.
 Cialdini's theory of influence is based on six key principles: 
reciprocity, commitment and consistency, social proof, authority, 
liking, scarcity.
Six Key Principles
- Reciprocity – People tend to return a favor, thus the pervasiveness of free samples in marketing. In his conferences, he often uses the example of Ethiopia providing thousands of dollars in humanitarian aid to Mexico just after the 1985 earthquake, despite Ethiopia suffering from a crippling famine and civil war at the time. Ethiopia had been reciprocating the diplomatic support Mexico provided when Italy invaded Ethiopia in 1935. The good cop/bad cop strategy is also based on this principle.
- Commitment and consistency – If people commit, orally or in writing, to an idea or goal, they are more likely to honor that commitment because they have stated that that idea or goal fits their self-image. Even if the original incentive or motivation is removed after they have already agreed, they will continue to honor the agreement. Cialdini notes Chinese brainwashing of American prisoners of war to rewrite their self-image and gain automatic unenforced compliance. Another example is marketers who make the user close popups by saying “I’ll sign up later” or "No thanks, I prefer not making money”.
- Social proof – People will do things that they see other people are doing. For example, in one experiment, one or more confederates would look up into the sky; bystanders would then look up into the sky to see what they were missing. At one point this experiment was aborted, as so many people were looking up that they stopped traffic. See conformity, and the Asch conformity experiments.
- Authority – People will tend to obey authority figures, even if they are asked to perform objectionable acts. Cialdini cites incidents such as the Milgram experiments in the early 1960s and the My Lai massacre.
- Liking – People are easily persuaded by other people whom they like. Cialdini cites the marketing of Tupperware in what might now be called viral marketing. People were more likely to buy if they liked the person selling it to them. Some of the many biases favoring more attractive people are discussed. See physical attractiveness stereotype.
- Scarcity – Perceived scarcity will generate demand. For example, saying offers are available for a "limited time only" encourages sales.
Four Social Engineering Vectors
Vishing
Vishing, otherwise known as "voice phishing", is the criminal practice of using social engineering over a telephone system
 to gain access to private personal and financial information from the 
public for the purpose of financial reward. It is also employed by 
attackers for reconnaissance purposes to gather more detailed intelligence on a target organization.
Phishing
Phishing is a technique of fraudulently obtaining private 
information. Typically, the phisher sends an e-mail that appears to come
 from a legitimate business—a bank, or credit card company—requesting "verification" of information and warning of some dire consequence
 if it is not provided. The e-mail usually contains a link to a 
fraudulent web page that seems legitimate—with company logos and 
content—and has a form requesting everything from a home address to an ATM card's PIN or a credit card number. For example, in 2003, there was a phishing scam in which users received emails supposedly from eBay claiming that the user's account was about to be suspended unless a link provided was clicked to update a credit card
 (information that the genuine eBay already had). By mimicking a 
legitimate organization's HTML code and logos, it is relatively simple 
to make a fake Website look authentic. The scam tricked some people into
 thinking that eBay was requiring them to update their account 
information by clicking on the link provided. By indiscriminately spamming
 extremely large groups of people, the "phisher" counted on gaining 
sensitive financial information from the small percentage (yet large 
number) of recipients who already have eBay accounts and also fall prey 
to the scam.
Smishing
The act of using SMS text messaging to lure victims into a specific course of action. Like phishing it can be clicking on a malicious link or divulging information.
Impersonation
Pretending
 or pretexting to be another person with the goal of gaining access 
physically to a system or building. Impersonation is used in the "SIM swap scam" fraud.
Other Concepts
Pretexting
Pretexting (adj. pretextual)  is the act of creating and using an invented scenario (the pretext)
 to engage a targeted victim in a manner that increases the chance the 
victim will divulge information or perform actions that would be 
unlikely in ordinary circumstances. An elaborate lie, it most often involves some prior research or setup and the use of this information for impersonation (e.g., date of birth, Social Security number, last bill amount) to establish legitimacy in the mind of the target.
This technique can be used to fool a business into disclosing customer information as well as by private investigators
 to obtain telephone records, utility records, banking records and other
 information directly from company service representatives. The information can then be used to establish even greater legitimacy under tougher questioning with a manager, e.g., to make account changes, get specific balances, etc.
Pretexting can also be used to impersonate co-workers, police, 
bank, tax authorities, clergy, insurance investigators—or any other 
individual who could have perceived authority or right-to-know in the 
mind of the targeted victim. The pretexter must simply prepare answers 
to questions that might be asked by the victim. In some cases, all that 
is needed is a voice that sounds authoritative, an earnest tone, and an 
ability to think on one's feet to create a pretextual scenario.
Vishing
Phone phishing (or "vishing") uses a rogue interactive voice response
 (IVR) system to recreate a legitimate-sounding copy of a bank or other 
institution's IVR system. The victim is prompted (typically via a 
phishing e-mail) to call in to the "bank" via a (ideally toll free) 
number provided in order to "verify" information. A typical "vishing" 
system will reject log-ins continually, ensuring the victim enters PINs 
or passwords multiple times, often disclosing several different 
passwords. More advanced systems transfer the victim to the 
attacker/defrauder, who poses as a customer service agent or security expert for further questioning of the victim.
Spear Phishing
Although similar to "phishing", spear phishing is a technique that 
fraudulently obtains private information by sending highly customized 
emails to few end users. It is the main difference between phishing 
attacks because phishing campaigns focus on sending out high volumes of 
generalized emails with the expectation that only a few people will 
respond. On the other hand, spear phishing emails require the attacker 
to perform additional research on their targets in order to "trick" end 
users into performing requested activities. The success rate of 
spear-phishing attacks is considerably higher than phishing attacks with
 people opening roughly 3% of phishing emails when compared to roughly 
70% of potential attempts. Furthermore, when users actually open the 
emails phishing emails have a relatively modest 5% success rate to have 
the link or attachment clicked when compared to a spear-phishing 
attack's 50% success rate.
Spear Phishing success is heavily dependent on the amount and quality of OSINT (Open Source Intelligence) that the attacker can obtain. Social media account activity is one example of a source of OSINT.
Water Holing
Water holing is a targeted social engineering strategy that 
capitalizes on the trust users have in websites they regularly visit. 
The victim feels safe to do things they would not do in a different 
situation. A wary person might, for example, purposefully avoid clicking
 a link in an unsolicited email, but the same person would not hesitate 
to follow a link on a website they often visit. So, the attacker 
prepares a trap for the unwary prey at a favored watering hole. This 
strategy has been successfully used to gain access to some (supposedly) 
very secure systems.
The attacker may set out by identifying a group or individuals to
 target. The preparation involves gathering information about websites 
the targets often visit from the secure system. The information 
gathering confirms that the targets visit the websites and that the 
system allows such visits. The attacker then tests these websites for 
vulnerabilities to inject code that may infect a visitor's system with malware.
 The injected code trap and malware may be tailored to the specific 
target group and the specific systems they use. In time, one or more 
members of the target group will get infected and the attacker can gain 
access to the secure system.
Baiting
Baiting is like the real-world Trojan horse that uses physical media and relies on the curiosity or greed of the victim. In this attack, attackers leave malware-infected floppy disks, CD-ROMs, or USB flash drives
 in locations people will find them (bathrooms, elevators, sidewalks, 
parking lots, etc.), give them legitimate and curiosity-piquing labels, 
and waits for victims.
For example, an attacker may create a disk featuring a corporate 
logo, available from the target's website, and label it "Executive 
Salary Summary Q2 2012". The attacker then leaves the disk on the floor 
of an elevator or somewhere in the lobby of the target company. An 
unknowing employee may find it and insert the disk into a computer to 
satisfy their curiosity, or a good Samaritan may find it and return it 
to the company. In any case, just inserting the disk into a computer 
installs malware, giving attackers access to the victim's PC and, 
perhaps, the target company's internal computer network.
Unless computer controls block infections, insertion compromises PCs "auto-running" media. Hostile devices can also be used. For instance, a "lucky winner" is sent a free digital audio player compromising any computer it is plugged to. A "road apple" (the colloquial term for horse manure, suggesting the device's undesirable nature) is any removable media with malicious software left in opportunistic or conspicuous places. It may be a CD, DVD, or USB flash drive,
 among other media. Curious people take it and plug it into a computer, 
infecting the host and any attached networks. Again, hackers may give 
them enticing labels, such as "Employee Salaries" or "Confidential".
One study done in 2016 had researchers drop 297 USB drives around
 the campus of the University of Illinois. The drives contained files on
 them that linked to webpages owned by the researchers. The researchers 
were able to see how many of the drives had files on them opened, but 
not how many were inserted into a computer without having a file opened.
 Of the 297 drives that were dropped, 290 (98%) of them were picked up 
and 135 (45%) of them "called home".
Quid pro quo
Quid pro quo means something for something:
- An attacker calls random numbers at a company, claiming to be calling back from technical support. Eventually this person will hit someone with a legitimate problem, grateful that someone is calling back to help them. The attacker will "help" solve the problem and, in the process, have the user type commands that give the attacker access or launch malware.
- In a 2003 information security survey, 91% of office workers gave researchers what they claimed was their password in answer to a survey question in exchange for a cheap pen. Similar surveys in later years obtained similar results using chocolates and other cheap lures, although they made no attempt to validate the passwords.
Tailgating
An attacker, seeking entry to a restricted area secured by unattended, electronic access control, e.g. by RFID
 card, simply walks in behind a person who has legitimate access. 
Following common courtesy, the legitimate person will usually hold the 
door open for the attacker or the attackers themselves may ask the 
employee to hold it open for them. The legitimate person may fail to ask
 for identification for any of several reasons, or may accept an 
assertion that the attacker has forgotten or lost the appropriate 
identity token. The attacker may also fake the action of presenting an 
identity token.
Other Types
Common confidence tricksters
 or fraudsters also could be considered "social engineers" in the wider 
sense, in that they deliberately deceive and manipulate people, 
exploiting human weaknesses to obtain personal benefit. They may, for 
example, use social engineering techniques as part of an IT fraud.
A very recent type of social engineering technique includes spoofing or hacking IDs of people having popular e-mail IDs such as Yahoo!, Gmail, Hotmail, etc. Among the many motivations for deception are:
- Phishing credit-card account numbers and their passwords.
- Cracking private e-mails and chat histories, and manipulating them by using common editing techniques before using them to extort money and creating distrust among individuals.
- Cracking websites of companies or organizations and destroying their reputation.
- Computer virus hoaxes
- Convincing users to run malicious code within the web browser via self-XSS attack to allow access to their web account
Countermeasures
Organizations reduce their security risks by: 
Training to Employees
Training employees in security protocols relevant to their position. 
(e.g., in situations such as tailgating, if a person's identity cannot 
be verified, then employees must be trained to politely refuse.)
Standard Framework
Establishing frameworks of trust on an employee/personnel level (i.e., 
specify and train personnel when/where/why/how sensitive information 
should be handled)
Scrutinizing Information
Identifying which information is sensitive and evaluating its exposure 
to social engineering and breakdowns in security systems (building, 
computer system, etc.)
Security Protocols
Establishing security protocols, policies, and procedures for handling sensitive information.
Event Test
Performing unannounced, periodic tests of the security framework.
Inoculation
Preventing social engineering and other fraudulent tricks or traps by 
instilling a resistance to persuasion attempts through exposure to 
similar or related attempts.
Review
Reviewing the above steps regularly: no solutions to information integrity are perfect.
Waste Management
Using a waste management service that has dumpsters with locks on them, 
with keys to them limited only to the waste management company and the 
cleaning staff. Locating the dumpster either in view of employees so 
that trying to access it carries a risk of being seen or caught, or 
behind a locked gate or fence where the person must trespass before they
 can attempt to access the dumpster.
The life cycle of Social Engineering
- Information gathering-Information gathering is the first and for the most step that requires much patience and keenly watching habits of the victim. This step gathering data about the victim’s interests, personal information. It determines the success rate of the overall attack.
- Engaging with victim-After gathering required amount of information, the attacker opens a conversation with the victim smoothly without the victim finding anything inappropriate.
- Attacking-This step generally occurs after a long period of engaging with the target and during this information from the target is retrieved by using social engineering. In phase, the attacker gets the results from the target.
- Closing interaction-This is the last step which includes slowly shutting down the communication by the attacker without arising any suspicion in the victim. In this way, the motive is fulfilled as well as the victim rarely comes to know the attack even happened.
Notable Social Engineers
Frank Abagnale Jr.
Frank Abagnale Jr.
 is an American security consultant known for his background as a former
 con man, check forger, and impostor while he was between the ages of 15
 and 21. He became one of the most notorious impostors,
 claiming to have assumed no fewer than eight identities, including an 
airline pilot, a physician, a U.S. Bureau of Prisons agent, and a 
lawyer. Abagnale escaped from police custody twice (once from a taxiing 
airliner and once from a U.S. federal penitentiary) before turning 22 
years old.
Kevin Mitnick
Kevin Mitnick is an American computer security consultant, author and hacker,
 best known for his high-profile 1995 arrest and later five year 
conviction for various computer and communications-related crimes.
 He now runs the security firm Mitnick Security Consulting, LLC which 
helps test companies' security strengths, weaknesses, and potential 
loopholes. He is also the Chief Hacking Officer of the security 
awareness training company KnowBe4, as well as an active advisory board 
member at Zimperium, a firm that develops a mobile intrusion prevention system.
Susan Headley
Susan Headley was an American hacker active during the late 1970s and early 1980s widely respected for her expertise in social engineering, pretexting, and psychological subversion.
 She was known for her specialty in breaking into military computer 
systems, which often involved going to bed with military personnel and 
going through their clothes for usernames and passwords while they 
slept. She became heavily involved in phreaking with Kevin Mitnick and Lewis de Payne in Los Angeles,
 but later framed them for erasing the system files at US Leasing after a
 falling out, leading to Mitnick's first conviction. She retired to 
professional poker.
Badir Brothers
Brothers
 Ramy, Muzher, and Shadde Badir—all of whom were blind from 
birth—managed to set up an extensive phone and computer fraud scheme in Israel in the 1990s using social engineering, voice impersonation, and Braille-display computers.
Law
In common law, pretexting is an invasion of privacy tort of appropriation.
Pretexting of Telephone Records
In December 2006, United States Congress approved a Senate sponsored bill making the pretexting of telephone records a federal felony
 with fines of up to $250,000 and ten years in prison for individuals 
(or fines of up to $500,000 for companies). It was signed by President 
George W. Bush on 12 January 2007.
Federal Legislation
The 1999 "GLBA" is a U.S. Federal
  law that specifically addresses pretexting of banking records as an 
illegal act punishable under federal statutes. When a business entity 
such as a private investigator, SIU insurance investigator, or an 
adjuster conducts any type of deception, it falls under the authority of
 the Federal Trade Commission
 (FTC). This federal agency has the obligation and authority to ensure 
that consumers are not subjected to any unfair or deceptive business 
practices. US Federal Trade Commission Act, Section 5 of the FTCA
 states, in part:
"Whenever the Commission shall have reason to believe that any such 
person, partnership, or corporation has been or is using any unfair 
method of competition or unfair or deceptive act or practice in or 
affecting commerce, and if it shall appear to the Commission that a 
proceeding by it in respect thereof would be to the interest of the 
public, it shall issue and serve upon such person, partnership, or 
corporation a complaint stating its charges in that respect."
The statute states that when someone obtains any personal, 
non-public information from a financial institution or the consumer, 
their action is subject to the statute. It relates to the consumer's 
relationship with the financial institution. For example, a pretexter 
using false pretenses either to get a consumer's address from the 
consumer's bank, or to get a consumer to disclose the name of their 
bank, would be covered. The determining principle is that pretexting 
only occurs when information is obtained through false pretenses.
While the sale of cell telephone records has gained significant 
media attention, and telecommunications records are the focus of the two
 bills currently before the United States Senate,
 many other types of private records are being bought and sold in the 
public market. Alongside many advertisements for cell phone records, 
wireline records and the records associated with calling cards are 
advertised. As individuals shift to VoIP telephones, it is safe to 
assume that those records will be offered for sale as well. Currently, 
it is legal to sell telephone records, but illegal to obtain them.
1st Source Information Specialists
U.S. Rep. Fred Upton (R-Kalamazoo,
 Michigan), chairman of the Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on 
Telecommunications and the Internet, expressed concern over the easy 
access to personal mobile phone records on the Internet during a House 
Energy & Commerce Committee hearing on "Phone Records For Sale: Why Aren't Phone Records Safe From Pretexting?" Illinois
 became the first state to sue an online records broker when Attorney 
General Lisa Madigan sued 1st Source Information Specialists, Inc. A 
spokeswoman for Madigan's office said. The Florida-based company 
operates several Web sites that sell mobile telephone records, according
 to a copy of the suit. The attorneys general of Florida and Missouri
 quickly followed Madigan's lead, filing suits respectively, against 1st
 Source Information Specialists and, in Missouri's case, one other 
records broker – First Data Solutions, Inc. 
Several wireless providers, including T-Mobile, Verizon, and 
Cingular filed earlier lawsuits against records brokers, with Cingular 
winning an injunction against First Data Solutions and 1st Source 
Information Specialists. U.S. Senator Charles Schumer
 (D-New York) introduced legislation in February 2006 aimed at curbing 
the practice. The Consumer Telephone Records Protection Act of 2006 
would create felony criminal penalties for stealing and selling the records of mobile phone, landline, and Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) subscribers.
HP
Patricia Dunn,
 former chairwoman of Hewlett Packard, reported that the HP board hired a
 private investigation company to delve into who was responsible for 
leaks within the board. Dunn acknowledged that the company used the 
practice of pretexting to solicit the telephone records of board members
 and journalists. Chairman Dunn later apologized for this act and 
offered to step down from the board if it was desired by board members.
 Unlike Federal law, California law specifically forbids such 
pretexting. The four felony charges brought on Dunn were dismissed.
Preventive measures
Taking
 some precautions reduce the risk of being a victim to social 
engineering frauds. The precautions that can be made are as follows:-
- Be aware of offers that seem “Too good to be true “.
- Avoid clicking on attachments from unknown sources.
- Not giving out personal information to anyone via email, phone, or text messages.
- Use of spam filter software such as Spam box.
- Avoid befriending people that you do not know in real life.
- Teach kids to contact a trusted adult in case they are being bullied over the internet (cyberbullying) or feel threatened by anything online.
 

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