Paper Title
Devising and Detecting Phishing: large language models (GPT3, GPT4) vs. Smaller Human Models (V-Triad, generic emails)
Corp Blog Article
Paper Abstract Summary
Phishing Attacks
Example GPT-V-triad Email
Phishing Defense
Paper Abstract
AI programs, built using large language models, make it possible to automatically create phishing emails based on a few data points about a user. They stand in contrast to traditional phishing emails that hackers manually design using general rules gleaned from experience. The V-Triad is an advanced set of rules for manually designing phishing emails that exploit our cognitive heuristics and biases. In this study, we compared how many participants pressed a link in emails created automatically by GPT-4 and created manually using the V-triad. We also combine GPT-4 with the V-triad to assess their combined potential. A fourth group, exposed to generic phishing emails, was our control group. We utilized a factorial approach, sending emails to 112 randomly selected participants recruited for the study. The control group emails received a click-through rate between 19-28%, the GPT-generated emails 30-44%, emails generated by the V-Triad 69-79%, and emails generated by GPT and the V-triad 43-81 %. Next, we used four of the most popular large language models (GPT, Claude, PaLM, LLaMA) to detect the intention of phishing emails and compared the results to human detection. In some cases, the AI programs are surprisingly good at detecting malicious intent, even for non-obvious phishing emails, sometimes surpassing human detection, although often being slightly less accurate than humans.
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Ok but why is the thumbnail a mail from Starbucks about a student deal?
Sorry it’s not clear. It’s the example phishing letter sent to the student, in the GPT-V-triad email case.
Well damn, could have fooled me and i am in IT and don’t drink coffee.
Also not a harvard student but when i was a student i wasn’t gonna second guess a discount on my student pass.
No kidding. The email itself is smooth. But now, I bet you would have caught it by the sender, though, the paper mentions using gmail addresses for the from field.
When I was a student, if someone gave me free stuffs, I wouldn’t have thought too much about it. People nowadays have to have 0-trust policy for their online comm; this is pretty dystopian.