Smarter botnets and attacks targeting web services will be the two most
serious threats facing users next year, according to
McAfee.
The security firm's top 10 security threats for 2008 was headed by attacks on
web 2.0 sites, followed by increasingly sophisticated botnets led by the
infamous Storm
infection.
Other possible threats include an increase in malware aimed at online games,
a rise in Windows Vista attacks and an increased focus on virtualisation and
VoIP.
Many of the threats to web 2.0 services are based on poor design. McAfee
security researcher Craig Schmugar suggested that companies are not making
security a top priority, likening it to early operating system software like
Windows 95.
"Functionality is ahead of the security curve in the web 2.0 space," he said.
"Security may not have been the top of the list as far as the feature set goes.
"
Dave Marcus, security research and communications manager at McAfee, noted
that the porous design of web-based services coincided with a rise in
cross-site scripting vulnerabilities, which overtook buffer overflow errors last
year as the most common reported vulnerability.
"It always seems to be that the buffer overflow is considered the holy grail,
" he said. "But cross-site scripting is more potent and has been more valuable
lately."
Second on McAfee's list was the increasing sophistication of botnets, which
Schmugar and Marcus largely attributed to the hackers behind the Storm worm.
The email-borne attack hounded users and researchers throughout 2007, hiding
itself in a variety of forms of spam.
McAfee claimed that the attackers found new ways to present Storm, and
different ways to write the malware itself.
Schmugar explained that Storm is an example of a polymorphic worm, changing
its code with each new infection to avoid detection by security software.
Unlike other polymorphic worms which change the code on infecting the end
user, Storm re-writes itself on the host server.
This makes it much more difficult for researchers to obtain a sample which
will allow them to see how the code changes and defend against it.
Schmugar sees this as a dangerous precedent for the way botnets are spread
and operated.
"Storm is the poster child. We will see other botnet operators look to Storm
and piggyback on what it's doing," he said.
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