Zimperium Report Exposes Alarming Surge in Mishing Attacks

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Zimperium’s latest research reveals the shifting landscape of mobile phishing attacks. The 2024 data analysis emphasizes the critical need for organizations to implement mobile-specific security measures, as attackers increasingly adopt a “mobile-first” approach to infiltrate corporate networks and access sensitive data.
Key Findings from Zimperium’s 2024 Mobile Phishing Report:
  • Smishing (SMS/text based phishing) remains the most common mobile phishing vector, with 37% of attacks in India, 16% in the U.S., and 9% in Brazil.
  • Mobile-targeted email phishing is increasing with attacks specifically designed to evade desktop security measures, executing only on mobile devices.
  • Quishing (QR code phishing) is emerging, with notable activity in Japan (17%), the U.S. (15%), and India (11%).
  • 3% of phishing sites use device-specific redirection, showing benign content on desktops while targeting mobile devices with phishing payloads.
  • Research shows attackers reusing CIDR blocks to host multiple phishing domains, extending attack reach and persistence.
  • Mishing activity peaked in August 2024, with over 1,000 daily attack records.

 

The Strategic Implications for Enterprise Security

As organizations increasingly rely on mobile devices for business operations, including multi-factor authentication and mobile-first applications, mobile phishing poses a severe risk to enterprise security. Attackers are exploiting security gaps in cloud and mobile business applications, expanding the attack surface and increasing exposure to credential theft and data compromise. Traditional anti-phishing measures designed for desktops are proving inadequate, requiring a shift to mobile threat defense solutions on the mobile device.

“Mishing is not just an evolution of traditional mobile phishing tactics—it is an entirely new category of attack engineered to exploit the specific capabilities and vulnerabilities of mobile devices, such as cameras,” said Nico Chiaraviglio, Chief Scientist at Zimperium. “Our research shows that attackers are increasingly leveraging multiple mobile-specific channels—including SMS, email, QR codes, and voice phishing (vishing)—to exploit user behaviors and expand their attack surface.”

To download the zLabs Mishing Report: The Evolution of Mobile-Specific Phishing Attacks, visit the website here.

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Taylor Graham, marketing grad with an inner nature to be a perpetual researchist, currently all things IT. Personally and professionally, Taylor is one to know with her tenacity and encouraging spirit. When not working you can find her spending time with friends and family.