Criminals who conduct phishing assaults over e-mail have ramped up their abuse of a brand new menace vector designed to bypass present anti-spam and anti-phishing safety: The usage of a graphics file format known as SVG.
The assaults, which start with e-mail messages which have .svg file attachments, began to unfold late final yr, and have ramped up considerably since mid-January.
The file format is designed as a way to attract resizable, vector-based pictures on a pc. By default, SVG recordsdata open within the default browser on Home windows computer systems. However SVG recordsdata usually are not simply composed of binary knowledge, just like the extra acquainted JPEG, PNG, or BMP file codecs. SVG recordsdata include textual content directions in an XML format for drawing their footage in a browser window.
![The content of a legitimate SVG file source alongside a thumbnail](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image2.png)
However as a result of SVG pictures can load and render natively inside a browser, they’ll additionally include anchor tags, scripting, and different kinds of energetic net content material. On this method, menace actors have been abusing the file format. The SVG recordsdata used within the assaults embrace some directions to attract quite simple shapes, akin to rectangles, but additionally include an anchor tag that hyperlinks to an internet web page hosted elsewhere.
![A malicious SVG links to a Google Doc file](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image3.png)
When an individual unfamiliar with the format double-clicks the attachment of their e-mail, their laptop opens the SVG file of their browser. The browser renders each the vector graphics and the anchor tags in a brand new tab.
![A simplistic malicious SVG hotlinks the recipient's email and some text to a phishing page](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image4.png)
If the goal clicks the hyperlink embedded within the SVG file, the browser will then open the hyperlink, which invariably results in a social engineering trick designed to lure the goal right into a state of affairs the place they should log in to an account.
Social engineering tips utilized in SVG phishing assaults
The topic strains and messages we’ve seen use many tropes frequent to generic phishing assaults.
One of many patterns getting used asserts that the attachment is a authorized doc that requires a signature. The message topic might use one of many following strains, or one thing comparable:
- Accomplished: [random characters]_Contract_and_Agreement_[numbers] REF ID [numbers]
- Time to Signal: 2025 SuperAnnuation Enrollment Settlement (January 2025).
- New Voicemail [recipient’s email username]
- You have got a brand new voicemail
- New Voicemail from [email username]
- New Vendor PO#[numbers] (Submission Ref: [random characters], Dated: [date]/Jan/2025)
- TT-[numbers] Accredited
- XeroxVersaLink_[random characters]-2025-01-[date]_Contract_[random characters].pdf
- Well being and Bonus Advantages Enrollment -Ref:-br#[numbers], Dated : [date]/Jan/2025
- Fee Recommendation – Ref: / RFQ Precedence Fee / Buyer Ref:
- KPI Evaluation and Fee Launch for [email username] (Ref: [numbers], Dated [day of week], [date]).
- Necessary: Save or print your finalized doc Evaluation Doc completion—kindly affirm or ammend #BookingRef-[random characters]
- Fee Affirmation – SWIFT [random characters].pdf
- Your RemittanceReciept Fax-[date]/2025 [time] Contact – [email address]
- eSignature Required: Capital Funding Docs Through e-Docs Ref-[random characters]
- Motion: Scan Knowledge: Distribution Settlement on your overview and signature. Message ID: #[random characters]
- Attn: Audio Recording REC#[numbers].wav Transcript [date] January 2025 $[random characters]
Many well-known manufacturers and on-line companies are being abused by these assaults, together with:
- DocuSign
- Microsoft SharePoint
- Dropbox
- Google Voice
- RingCentral
The physique content material of those messages is equally rudimentary, although it might include the e-mail username (the a part of the deal with that seems earlier than the @ signal) of the recipient/goal within the physique of the message.
![A malicious SVG attached to a fake "fax notification" email](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image5.png)
How the assault works
When the goal receives an e-mail with an SVG attachment and opens it, until they’ve one other program they already use to work with SVG recordsdata, the file opens within the default browser.
The best of those malicious SVG recordsdata include one or a number of strains of hyperlinked textual content that prepend the e-mail username to the phrase “Click on To Open” or “Click on the hyperlink under to take heed to the voicemail.”
![A simplistic SVG that purports to be a voicemail notification](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image6.png)
The hyperlink results in a phishing web page behind a CloudFlare captcha gate. Verify the field to show you’re a human, and also you’re redirected to a web page operated by the phishing gang that frames an actual Office365 login dialog inside itself, so it may possibly validate the e-mail and password similtaneously stealing it.
![A CAPTCHA protects a phishing site](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image7.png)
![An alternative CAPTCHA page gating a phishing site](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image8.png)
Nonetheless, we’ve discovered extra elaborately constructed recordsdata as nicely. One model embeds a hyperlink to a distant picture inside the “svg.” The pictures are hosted on a special, attacker-controlled area.
![The SVG contains a live link that points to a raster image resembling a SharePoint notification hosted elsewhere](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image9.png)
There are a number of completely different variations of the embedded picture which might be designed to appear like DocuSign or SharePoint pages. Clicking wherever on the picture masses the CAPTCHA-gated phishing web page. One other model masses the picture from a Google Doc.
![The "LegalSkillsTraining" website hosts nothing but images leveraged in SVG phishing campaigns](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image10.png)
Probably the most convoluted of those malicious SVGs contained complete blocks of textual content that had been lifted, seemingly at random, from Wikipedia articles. The textual content was embedded within the supply of the SVG however commented out, so it doesn’t seem on display screen.
![A Wikipedia entry fills space in this malicious SVG that also includes Javascript](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image11.png)
Additionally current inside one other SVG was an elaborate JavaScript that mechanically masses the phishing web page after a brief delay, even when the consumer doesn’t click on any of the hotlinked content material.
![The "RaccoonClient" version of the SVG automatically loads the phishing page after a delay](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image12.png)
The phishing pages had been all hosted on attacker-controlled domains. As beforehand talked about, practically all of them had been gated with a CloudFlare CAPTCHA to forestall automated visits. The websites prefetch the content material of the Office365 login dialog from login.stay.com and current the goal with all of the anticipated animations acquainted to an O365 consumer.
![The source of the phishing page shows it loading the Microsoft login content inside a frame within the page](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image13.png)
In some circumstances, the script pre-populated the login dialog with the goal’s e-mail deal with, which had been handed within the question string from the hyperlink embedded within the SVG file. An “EventListener” JavaScript within the iFrame captures all typed enter because the consumer enters it into the shape.
In assessments we ran in opposition to stay websites, a lot of the websites instantly captured the textual content enter and exfiltrated it on to the area internet hosting the iFrame the login dialog seems in. In a number of circumstances, we found that the credentials had been transmitted to a number of websites concurrently.
![One of the external sites that received exfiltrated data, "VirtualPorno," which had nothing of the sort but did have open directories](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image14.png)
One session even handed the credentials to a Telegram bot utilizing the messaging service’s API.
![An SVG phishing page exfiltrates data to a Telegram bot](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image15.png)
Over the course of every week, we had been capable of observe the phishing pages rising extra subtle. Very sparsely designed pages started to get cleaner, akin to this “voicemail” web page.
![A "voicemail" download link prompts for a password. The target's email address was prefilled.](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image16.png)
We additionally noticed manufacturers like Google Voice fastidiously mimicked in some phishing pages.
![A fake Google Voice login also had the target's email address as well as the name of their employer's organization embedded in the page.](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image17.png)
We ultimately discovered variations that focused completely different languages, based mostly on the top-level area of the recipient. For instance, each the e-mail addressed to a goal at a Japanese educational establishment, and its embedded SVG, was crafted in Japanese. This led to a really practical trying simulacrum of a Dropbox login display screen, additionally localized to Japanese.
![A fake Dropbox login in Japanese prompts the target to download a voicemail message](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image18.png)
One of many SVG recordsdata appeared to attempt to leverage a networked drive on the goal’s personal community. It contained a Microsoft community path as an alternative of a URL.
![The "shared file" spam contains an SVG that uses a network path, presumably accessible to the target's network](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image19.png)
The “Shared File” hyperlink triggered a obtain of an HTML file, which when opened produced a web page that appears prefer it has a blurred PDF doc within the background.
![The local HTML file prompts the user to click the Open button](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image20.png)
However when examined, the browser threw an error message that indicated the positioning was attempting to open a neighborhood community path in Home windows Explorer.
![The error message indicates that instead of a webpage it was trying to open a local network path](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image21.png)
The web page supply appears to need to open a community path underneath “trycloudflare.com” that passes an embedded, hardcoded username and password unsuccessfully.
![A network path that contained a hardcoded username and password](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image22.png)
Lastly, one other of the SVG recordsdata we found appeared to include a considerable amount of knowledge encoded as base64. Once we decoded the info, we discovered that it was a Zip archive, containing two recordsdata.
![The SVG with a base64 data blob inside](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image23.png)
Of the 2 recordsdata compressed into the Zip file, one was password-protected, the opposite was not. The password-protected file is a Home windows malware executable. The unprotected file was a plaintext doc that, oddly, contained the password for the opposite file within the archive.
![The zip file contained a password-protected executable and an unprotected text file that contained the password for the other file](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image24.png)
It’s the primary time I’d seen a password for a password-protected Zip embedded into the Zip itself. But it surely did, actually, work.
![The password in the text file compressed with the malware](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image25.png)
The file, uncompressed, is a malware that we at the moment detect as Troj/AutoIt-DHB. It’s an AutoIt script that units up and installs a keystroke logger known as Nymeria, all by the goal double-clicking what’s ostensibly a picture file.
Severe sufferer grief
Malicious SVG recordsdata seem designed to evade detection by typical endpoint or mail safety instruments. Nonetheless, work by analysts because of this analysis led to the event of a detection signature for the assorted sorts of weaponized recordsdata we’ve noticed. That detection, Cxmail/EmSVG-C, is now stay in Sophos Central E mail.
For normal people, there are a few issues that may be carried out to inoculate your laptop in opposition to this menace. First, you could find an actual SVG graphic file, obtain it, after which instruct Home windows to all the time open it in Notepad (or another non-browser program) as an alternative of the default browser.
To do that, you simply obtain an actual SVG graphic, like this one to your desktop. Proper-click the file, and select “Open with -> Select one other app” – decide one thing that isn’t a browser (like Notepad) and fill within the checkbox that reads “All the time use this app to open .svg recordsdata.”
![First choose another app...](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image26.png)
![...then pick something benign that should open it instead of the browser](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image27.png)
Even in case you by chance click on a malicious SVG sooner or later, it’ll solely open in Notepad, throwing one other roadblock in entrance of (doubtlessly) being phished. (If, in some unspecified time in the future, you discover you have to work with actual SVG recordsdata, observe the identical steps once more, and select the graphics utility you propose to make use of.)
The phishing pages that loaded on this assault had been additionally fairly clearly not hosted on Microsoft’s regular web sites. Merely trying on the URL within the browser deal with bar ought to be sufficient to disclose you’re not visiting SharePoint or DocuSign, if you’re loading a web page with an .ru top-level area.
![Your first clue is the .ru](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image28.png)
There have been different clues as nicely, akin to the truth that the invoices or different messages appeared to come back from e-mail accounts that had by no means emailed the targets earlier than, and had been mild on particulars like contact info (and even any message in any respect within the physique, in some circumstances).
![I hope your lawyer writes more than absolutely nothing when they send you a contract to sign](https://news.sophos.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/202502_svgphish_image29.png)
So conserving a pointy, important eye on messages that appear fishy is likely to be the most effective phishing prevention
Indicators of compromise
Indicators of compromise for this menace have been posted to our Github repository. Detections have been added for the spam attachment subtype (CXmail/EmSVG-C) in Central E mail, SFOS, and a few endpoint merchandise, in addition to signature-based detection for the malicious SVG attachments (Troj/XMLPh-A, Troj/XMLPh-E, Troj/XMLPh-F, Troj/XMLDrp-AJ, Troj/XML-AV, and Troj/XMLDl-Ok).
Acknowledgments
Sophos X-Ops thanks Brett Cove and Fan Ho of the mail safety group, and Krupa Gajjar, Rutvik Panchal, Khushi Punia, Gyan Ranjan, Purva Shah, Kafil Ahmed Shaikh, Devang Sharma, Simran Sharma, Aaditya Trivedi, and Amey Vijaywargiya of SophosLabs.