Security experts have warned that virus and phishing levels have increased
significantly, reaching levels not seen since early 2006.
The
MessageLabs
Intelligence (PDF) report for September also highlights a second wave of
increasingly sophisticated email attacks targeted at executive-level and senior
management.
MessageLabs
estimates that, on average, there is now a virus threat incorporated within
every 48 emails.
Cyber-criminals are steering away from using the more obvious attachment
method of distribution, and favouring the use of links to malicious websites
hosting malware code.
This technique, which increased in popularity by approximately 15 per cent
this quarter, allows cyber-criminals to use social engineering attacks such as
e-cards.
Contrary to the
recent
findings in a report by
F-Secure,
MessageLabs has seen the volume of phishing threats surge this month with one in
every 87 emails hosting a phishing attack.
The report attributes this to the increased availability of phishing kits,
and new techniques such as 'rock' phishing which enables a single compromised
computer within a botnet to host multiple phishing sites at the same time.
"The start of the new school year seemed to bring back an increase in
old-school threats in high volumes," said Mark Sunner, chief security analyst at
MessageLabs.
"With email more ubiquitous than the telephone, and one in 48 emails
containing a virus, most people are unwittingly receiving more than one virus a
day.
"As we enter the last quarter of 2007 and draw closer to the holiday season,
the bad guys will be able to disguise their attacks through the increase in
genuine well-wishing emails and the anticipated upsurge in online shopping."
MessageLabs also believes that the rise of comprised machines through
aggressive botnet activity will further increase spam levels.
The September threat figures have also shown that highly targeted methods are
still rife.
MessageLabs saw more than 1,100 senior management executives targeted in an
attack on 12 September, thought to be by the same perpetrators of a similar
assault on 26 June.
The sophisticated emails purport to be from a recruitment company and use a
Microsoft error message to persuade the victims to click on the RTF attachment.
The RTF file contains an executable which drops two files onto the computer
which in turn will be used to pass sensitive information back to the attacker.
Paul Wood, a senior analyst at MessageLabs, told
vnunet.com that the
increase in highly targeted attacks was "particularly worrying as the methods
used and the small scale of the attacks made them very difficult to detect".
He added that alternative educational tools such as the
Anti-Phishing
Phil game designed by a team at
Carnegie
Mellon University are a great idea as technology, no matter how advanced,
will only ever provide some level of protection.
"Users need to have a level of education, support and knowledge to
effectively deal with security," said Wood.
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