Tuesday, January 25 2005 @ 07:05 PM EST Contributed by: glosser
The next release of Mozilla Thunderbird will come with anti-phishing mechanisms.
Mozilla contributor Henrik Gemal wrote last week in a blog that a phishing detector has been added to Thunderbird. This feature is likely to be available in the next release of Thunderbird, version 1.1, according to the Mozilla bug report.
In a phishing scam, fraudsters send e-mail messages that try to lure people to Web sites faked to look like sites belonging to trusted service providers such as banks. Once they click through, people are asked to hand over credit card numbers and other sensitive personal information, which the criminals could use to commit identity fraud.
With the new Thunderbird feature, when a user clicks on a link in an e-mail that appears to be a phishing URL, the detector will prompt the user with a dialog box before the Web site is opened, Gemal wrote. The detector is triggered if the URL has a numeric Internet Protocol address rather than a domain name, or if the URL does not match the address displayed in the link text.