Attackers Using Image Inversion Technique to Bypass Office 365 Filtering free cvv fullz, fullz website

A creative Office 365 phishing campaign was discovered by WMC Global Analysis researchers that a legitimate login page of a Microsoft Account, but uses color inversion to avoid matching patterns from image recognition software, according to  Kim Komando .
This method can hinder the software’s ability to flag this image altogether (as shown in the images below).
A victim visiting the website would likely recognize that the inverted picture is illegitimate and exit the website. Nevertheless, the threat actor has stored the inverted image and, within the index.php code, has used a CSS method to revert the color of the image to its original state.
Threat actors constantly plan to bypass detection, and that they can fool scanning engines by inverting or altering recognizable logos and pictures. This approach leads to the ultimate website’s appearing legitimate to users who visit, while crawlers and scanning engines are highly doubtful to detect the image as being an inverted copy of the Office365 background.
Tips to avoid getting tricked
As realistic as these phishing sites look, they tend to appear in places they have no business, like through random email links or pop-up ads. If you stay cautious and avoid sharing your login carelessly, your account is going to be safe. 
Also Read
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Hackers Would Bypass Multi-Factor Authentication to Gain Full Access to Microsoft 365 Services
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