Hacking tools head up the list of malware detected on computers around the
world, according to figures released by
Microsoft at
Infosecurity
Europe 2007.
"Backdoors, key-loggers, downloads and droppers continue to be the main
malware menaces we're seeing in the marketplace," said Nicholas McGrath, head of
platform strategies Microsoft.
Data collected from Microsoft's security software between July and December
2006 showed that attacks were much more likely to target individual machines.
"The exploits are very much targeted at the individual, either by taking
their identity to gain from something like their credit card, or taking control
of the PC to build their own botnets to be used in organised criminal
activities," said McGrath.
The figures were collected from Microsoft's Malicious Software Removal Tool
(MSRT) released in January 2005.
"MSRT is now running on 310 million computers, and over 18 million computers
are also running Windows Defender," said McGrath.
McGrath claimed that the latest figures show that improvements in Windows XP
had led to a reduction in the amount of malware affecting PCs.
"With XP Gold there were many more instances where the software tool had to
run, in comparison to Windows XP with Service Pack 1, and the same with Windows
XP Service Pack 2," he said.
"It is a great testimony to the engineering work we have been doing to change
some of the fundamental architectural aspects of the operating system to make it
more difficult for malware to infect the machine unless through things like
social engineering."
McGrath was also encouraged to see that 94 per cent of machines are running
Windows XP with Service Pack 2, showing that users are taking security
seriously.
Microsoft hopes to reduce the spread of malware even further by targeting it
internationally, using localised versions of the security software.
"In the US and the UK, where we have already had Windows Update and Automatic
Update and Windows Defender and technologies such as Windows OneCare, the number
of incidences where we have detected malware has actually dropped dramatically
in those countries," said McGrath.
"When we release and bring new versions of our products online in local
languages, as in Germany and Japan, the numbers are quite high on the chart. We
are anticipating that over time the number of infections will actually decrease.
"
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