Internet users had to cope with rocketing levels of spam last month, along
with a number of
phishing
attacks and the arrival of a new
botnet.
The gloomy news from
Messagelabs'
Intelligence Report for May 2008 showed that spam levels are increasing;
levels reached 76.8 per cent of all emails last month, which the security
company said have not been experienced since early 2007.
According to
Messagelabs,
the rise is due to the change of tactics adopted by the spammers who are moving
further away from reliance on new and undetectable email attachments. Instead
they are exploiting free, mainstream hosted services such as Google Docs,
Calendar and Microsoft SkyDrive, which are not filtered by traditional spam
filters.
Mark Sunner, Messagelabs' chief security analyst, said: “The savvy,
intelligent and accurate cybercriminals of today seem to have abandoned the
attachments tactic that was so innovative in late 2007 and are now focused on
exploiting free hosted applications which have become mainstream in 2008.
“The spammers are taking advantage of the fact that these services are free,
provide ample bandwidth and are rarely blacklisted; this is one more addition to
the growing list of ways the spammers have succeeded in outsmarting traditional
detection devices.”
In addition to the variety of new spam techniques, Messagelabs also
identified several new phishing exploits and a challenger to the
Storm
botnet this month. Although Storm is still a huge threat, accounting for
more than 81,000 copies of a new wave of malware with the file name
iloveyou.exe, Messagelabs believes that the Srizbi botnet poses a serious
challenge. It accounted for 40 per cent of all spam last month.
It has been used by phishers to take advantage of the Central Bank in
Missouri’s ‘Go Green’ campaign to lure recipients into sharing their bank
details in order to register for eStatements.
The company also uncovered evidence of phishing attacks claiming to be from
HSBC bank which purported to be a secure connection via an https. However,
closer inspection revealed that it was actually a standard http link to a domain
pretending to be the bank.
“If the distribution of malware by Storm this month was successful, we could
expect to see a renewed deluge from Storm next month and further competition
between Storm and Srizbi,” said Sunner.
The report also shows the continuing problem of infected websites.
Messagelabs also identified an average of 1,311 new websites per day harbouring
malware and other potentially unwanted programs such as spyware and adware, an
increase of approximately 100 per day compared with the previous month.
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