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Right, you are correct, the user didn't want it. But the user's intent is not the line that distinguishes between phishing and a back door. Yes I'm serious. Phishing is a way to get people to do things they don't intend to do. Phishing involves a user interaction that is masquerading as legitimate, but is in fact malicious against the user's intent. Both phishing and back door attacks are always attempting to do something unwanted, and always intending to do it without the user knowing what's really happening. But the language "without the user's knowledge" referring to back doors means without any user interaction. I'm sure there are gray areas and situations where it's hard to distinguish, but a backdoor is most commonly defined as not involving any user interaction. A phishing attack involves user interaction. The phishing attack can be used to install a backdoor for future attacks, but that's not what happened here. This phishing attack asked the user for permission to do the things it wants to do. That's the front door. It's a guy pretending to be the mailman ringing the doorbell and asking if he can come in, then stealing stuff while he's there. The backdoor is a thief in a mask sneaking in a slightly open window at night when nobody's home. The difference is the fake mailman asked for permission. Even though he was fake. It wasn't my intent to let a thief in the house, it was my intent to let the mailman in, but I still got robbed. Make sense now? This distinction is important because there are things you can do to avoid phishing, as there are in this case, but there is nothing you can do to avoid a real back door, because it happens without any signaling at all, it happens without your knowledge. So back to @debatem1's point, this should have been called a sophisticated phishing attack, rather than being called, inaccurately, a back door attack. |
There is always some infection vector associated with a backdoor.