News
Web Attacks on the Rise; E-mail Attacks Decline
- By Stephen Swoyer
- April 29, 2008
According to a recent study from security and anti-virus specialist Sophos,
servers in the U.S. and China host the lion's share of malware-infected Web
sites. Meanwhile, Web attacks surged to an all-time high in the first quarter
of this year, according to Sophos -- with no sign of dropping off any time soon.
It's a disturbing trend. For the first three months of 2008, in fact, Sophos
identified about 15,000 freshly infected Web pages every day.
That's a staggering number. To put it in perspective, consider that last year
the security researcher discovered and blocked an infected Web page about once
every 14 seconds; this year, Sophos says, it's doing so about once every five
seconds.
There's a further wrinkle here. Last year, for example, the People's Republic
of China sat atop the malware list (it currently occupies the No. 2 slot) --
a discouraging state of affairs, to be sure, but one with an upside of a sort:
Web surfers were more likely to exercise vigilance with Chinese Web sites than
with sites in the U.S., Canada, the U.K. or the EU.
This time around, Sophos says, the U.S. is host to the largest number of malware-infected
Web sites. Couple this with another trend -- namely, that almost 80 percent
of "poisoned sites" are, in fact, legitimate Web sites that have been
hacked to host malware -- and you have a greater-than-even chance that users
could stumble unsuspectingly into a malware-infected trap.
"The U.S. has experienced unprecedented growth in this area, hosting almost
half of all infected websites. The country has almost doubled its contribution
to the chart compared to 2007, when it was responsible for hosting less than
a quarter of compromised Web sites," the report reads. "China, which
in 2007 was responsible for hosting more than half of the infected Web sites
on the web, has returned to its 2005 standing, playing host to just a third
of infected Web sites. A newcomer to this top 10 is Thailand, which in the first
quarter of 2008 accounted for 1 percent of the infected Web sites found by Sophos."
If Web attacks are on the rise, the prevalence of malware-infected e-mail --
that old standby of malicious and mischievous hackers alike -- seems to be declining.
According to Sophos' estimates, just .04 percent of all e-mail sent during Q1
was infected, compared with .11 percent during the first quarter of last year.
One reason for this decline is a tactical shift on the part of cybercriminals,
according to Sophos. "Rather than incorporating malware into the e-mail
in the form of an attachment, cybercriminals are using unsolicited e-mail to
provide links to compromised Web sites," Sophos officials say. "Ironically,
there is still a common belief that unsolicited e-mail, or spam, is a non-threat.
With virtually all of it unwanted, and a large proportion linking to infected
Web sites, organizations would be wise to address this problem before they become
a victim."
The frequency of e-mail-infected malware might be declining, but the same can't
be said for the prevalence of spam. According to Sophos, 92.3 percent of all
Q1 e-mail traffic was spam. Web spamming is also on the rise. "Sophos finds
a new spam-related Web page on average every 3 seconds -- [or] 23,300 each day.
This calculation includes pages registered on 'freeweb' sites, such as Blogspot,
Geocities, etc.," the Sophos report indicates.
Sophos and other experts link the rise in Web-mail spam to the circumvention
of CAPTCHA (i.e., reverse-Turing-Test) techniques. CAPTCHA is an acronym --
first coined by computer scientists at Carnegie-Mellon University -- to describe
a challenge/response test which allows a machine to determine that a user is
human.
About the Author
Stephen Swoyer is a Nashville, TN-based freelance journalist who writes about technology.