WHERE DOES MOST MALICIOUS CODE ORIGINATE?
30 March 2007
No, it's not Russia or even China - it's the good
ol' USA and Britain!
Information Week has published an intriguing new report
from the Finjan cyber security company warning users
that many online threats may not be coming from the
seedy underbelly of the Internet but rather from
adveretising on seemingly harmless and well-known sites.
And contrary to conventional wisdom, Russia and China
are not the main sources.
Finjan analysed more than 10 million URLs for its
quarterly Web Security Trends Report and found that most
malicious code - worms, Trojans, and viruses - doesn't
come from Russia, China, or any other country that is
considered to have substandard cybercrime laws.
Most malware comes straight out of the United States or
the United Kingdom, according to Yuval Ben-Itzhak, chief
technology officer of Finjan.
He also pointed out in an interview with InformationWeek
that malicious code isn't just being embedded in porn or
other low-class sites. Much of it can be found hiding in
advertisements on legitimate web venues.
"Malicious code is everywhere," said Ben-Itzhak. "Even
if you avoid sites where you know you should not go, you
can still get infected. It really can come from
anywhere."
As commercial interests continue to drive e-crime,
malicious code is more likely to be hosted on local
servers in the United States and the United Kingdom, the
report said. That means that relying solely on filters
that scan for where the code came from is no longer
fully effective, Ben-Itzhak said.
"Don't just inspect something coming from a porn site or
from Russia," he said. "You've got to inspect
everything. If code is going to delete something on my
machine, block it, and not just when it's from Russia."
Ben-Itzhak also warned users about clicking on online
advertisements - even on legitimate sites. Advertising
actually is the leading category for URLs containing
malicious code, accounting for 80 percent of all
instances. Many Web masters aren't aware of all the ads
popping up on their sites, he added, explaining that
many aren't embedding specific static ads on their sites
but buy into ad services that push ads onto the site.
"That's a main problem," said Ben-Itzhak. "You don't
have to be visiting blacklisted or suspicious sites to
get into trouble."
Online Casino News courtesy of InfoPowa
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