Cyber-squatting continues to be the most prevalent form of online brand abuse
after a 33 per cent jump in the past year, new research reveals.
The latest Brandjacking Index from
MarkMonitor
found significant drops in domain kiting and related pay-per-click fraud.
MarkMonitor attributed this trend to aggressive legal action by brand holders
as well as increased scrutiny by domain registrar
Icann.
However, phishing techniques and targets continued to evolve in 2007, and the
report highlighted a 533 per cent increase in phishing attacks against the
retail and services sector.
"Brand-jackers continue to sharpen their techniques to reap greater profits,
as demonstrated by this quarter's accelerated threats to mainstream industries
and their customers," said Irfan Salim, president and chief executive at
MarkMonitor.
"But brand holders have proven that they can fight back, and we have
witnessed an incredible turnaround in domain kiting and pay-per-click abuse."
Cyber-squatting rose 33 per cent over 2007, making it the most perpetrated
form of abuse and highlighting the increased use of brand names and trademarks
to drive traffic to illegitimate, unauthorised or offensive sites.
Instances of domain kiting, which involves deleting a domain name during the
five-day grace period and immediately re-registering it for another five-day
period, declined 14 per cent in 2007.
MarkMonitor believes that this decline is closely linked with successful
lawsuits filed by large brand holders against enabling registrars, along with a
greater application of laws against cyber-squatting and counterfeiting.
Instances of pay-per-click fraud, an abuse closely associated with domain
kiting, also dropped to a yearly low in the fourth quarter.
MarkMonitor found that brand-jackers are increasingly shifting their focus to
mainstream industry targets, including automotive, food and beverage and
consumer packaged goods.
Abuses of automotive brands increased by 83 per cent in 2007. Similarly, food
and beverage brand abuse increased 63 per cent, consumer packaged goods
increased 62 per cent and apparel increased 49 per cent.
The only industry segment to decline in 2007 was high technology which shrank
slightly by 10 per cent over the course of the year.
The report also found that phishers are targeting more organisations and
shifting their focus to new industries.
MarkMonitor reported that 412 organisations were targeted in the fourth
quarter of 2007, an increase of 38 per cent from the previous quarter and 37 per
cent over the year.
"Criminals and fraudsters around the world continue to develop new and
adaptive ways to take advantage of brands," said Frederick Felman, chief
marketing officer at MarkMonitor.
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