Spammers are becoming more business savvy and are capitalising on news and
seasonal trends in a more commercial way.
The
MessageLabs
Intelligence Report for January 2008 reveals that cyber-criminals are
already taking advantage of the looming credit crunch and trying to lure
bargain-hungry shoppers with New Year resolutions.
Spammers have increased the number of finance-related email campaigns and
attacks offering financial products, lottery scams, loans and jobs, according to
the report.
At the same time, they have cut back on replica watch and other well-known
spamming topics and focused on weight loss products and bargain designer clothes
in increased volumes.
"2008 got off to an aggressive start, especially for the spammers," said Mark
Sunner, chief security analyst at
MessageLabs.
"Spammers are proving more business-minded and time-sensitive than ever,
seeking to exploit the most common and current weaknesses from New Year weight
loss hopes to fears about the credit crunch.
"Unfortunately every month of the year provides the spammers with a newly
vulnerable group to target."
MessageLabs warned in January of a new form of attack known as search engine
spam which typically uses
Google and
Yahoo to
redirect searches to erroneous sites.
This technique, accounting for 17 per cent of spam in January, allows the
spammer to embed a link constructed from a search engine query within an email
message. When activated, the link resolves to the spammer's forged website.
Such a technique is hard for traditional anti-spam products to detect because
they cannot reasonably block links to legitimate search engines like Google and
Yahoo.
"In light of the financial market volatility, one may have expected stock
spam to rise," said Sunner.
"However, following the indictment of Alan Ralsky, the most prolific stock
spammer, stock spam levels have fallen to less than two per cent of all spam."
The study noted that the majority of spam comprises text-only or HTML
messages. Text spam has doubled in the past six months and now accounts for
around 60 per cent of spam compared with 30 per cent last summer.
Image spam now accounts for approximately two per cent of spam, compared with
a peak of 20 per cent in the summer of 2007. HTML spam now accounts for almost
38 per cent of all spam, compared with 50 per cent last summer.
Other file types including PDF, XLS and MP3 now account for less that one per
cent of spam.
The US remains the dominant source of spam, accounting for 36.6 per cent of
all spam sent in January.
Turkey, Korea, Russia and Germany round out the list of the top five
spam-sending countries.
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