McAfee, Inc. (NYSE:MFE) today released the McAfee Threats Report:
Fourth Quarter 2010, revealing a steady growth of threats to mobile
platforms. The number of pieces of new mobile malware in 2010 increased
by 46 percent compared with 2009. The report also uncovered 20 million
new pieces of malware in 2010, equating to nearly 55,000 new malware
threats every day. Of the almost 55 million total pieces of malware
McAfee Labs has identified, 36 percent was created in 2010.
Concurrently, spam accounted for 80 percent of total email traffic in Q4
2010, the lowest point since the first quarter of 2007.
"Our Q4 Threats Report shows that cybercriminals are keeping tabs
on what’s popular, and what will have the biggest impact from the
smallest effort,” said Vincent Weafer, senior vice president of McAfee
Labs. "In the past few quarters, malware trends have been very similar
in different geographies, but in the last quarter we’ve seen a
significant shift in various regions, showing that cybercriminals are
tapped in to trends worldwide. McAfee Labs also sees the direct
correlation between device popularity and cybercriminal activity, a
trend we expect to surge in 2011.”
Mobile Threats, Botnet Infections Increase
Threats to mobile platforms are not new. However, as more consumers use
mobile devices and tablets in their daily lives and at work,
cybercriminals have taken note. During the last several years, McAfee
Labs has seen a steady growth in the number of threats to mobile
devices. Some of the most interesting mobile threats of Q4 2010 were
SymbOS/Zitmo.A and Android/Geinimi. SymbOS/Zitmo.A was a high-profile
threat that struck early in the quarter. The creators of the Zeus botnet
repurposed an old version of a commercial spyware package.
Android/Geinimi, a Trojan inserted into legitimate mobile applications
and games for the Android platform, was one of the most important
threats of the quarter.
With the adoption of so many new mobile platforms, combined with the
lack of security awareness and mobile safeguards, McAfee Labs expects
cybercriminals to use botnet infections to target mobile devices. In Q4
2010, Cutwail was dethroned as the global leader in botnet activity,
with Rustock the most prevalent in many parts of the world, and Bobax
closely trailing behind the two.
Malware on the Rise; Spam in a "Transition Period”
The onslaught of malware seems to have no end, and the proliferation of
both handled and IP-enabled devices’ affect on this growth remains to be
seen. The top malware threats in Q4 2010 were very different in various
geographies, due in part to the larger trend that threats now tend to
match the types of users, habits and events that are specific to a
region. Favorites for cybercriminals worldwide this quarter consisted of
AutoRun malware (Generic!atr), banking Trojans and downloaders (PWS or
Generic.dx), as well as web-based exploits (StartPage and
Exploit-MS04-028).
Spam hitting its lowest levels in years can be attributed to a
"transition period,” with several botnets going dormant during a time of
year when spam volumes are usually on an upward path. In Q4, McAfee Labs
learned the Bredolab botnet had been closed along with parts of the Zeus
botnet. Around the Christmas holiday, spam from the Rustock, Lethic, and
Xarvester botnets all disappeared, while the spam leaders this quarter
were the Bobax and Grum botnets.
More Devices Mean More Web Threats
As more users access the Internet from an ever-expanding pool of
devices—computer, tablet, smartphone or Internet TV—web-based threats
will continue to grow in size and sophistication. In Q4, some of the
most active threats included Zeus-Murofet, Conficker and Koobface, and
the number of potentially malicious domains grew at a rapid pace.
Phishing URLs in the form of the IRS, gift cards, rewards accounts, and
social networking accounts were also among the most popular. McAfee Labs
found that within the top 100 results of the top daily search terms, 51
percent led to malicious sites, and on average each of these poisoned
results pages contained more than five malicious links. McAfee Labs
expects attacks using the techniques of search-engine abuse and trend
abuse to focus more specifically on new types of devices in 2011.
Adobe Product Vulnerabilities are Top Distribution Method of Choice
for Cybercriminals
In 2009, McAfee Labs predicted that vulnerabilities in Adobe product
would become the clear choice of malware authors and cybercriminals for
distribution malware and compromising systems and networks. This
prediction has come true. Throughout 2010 malware developers have
heavily exploited weaknesses in both Flash and especially PDF
technologies. McAfee Labs databases reveal that malicious PDFs targeting
Adobe Acrobat topped the number of unique samples by a wide margin,
making them the favorite target of client-side exploitation. McAfee Labs
is certain that the "Adobe” trend will continue this year, as more
mobile devices and non-Microsoft operating systems support various Adobe
technologies.
Hacktivism Gains Traction
The main hacktivist actor in Q4 2010 was the "Anonymous” activist group.
Its members engaged in various cyberdemonstrations against copyright
protection groups early in the quarter and against WikiLeaks censors and
detractors later in the quarter. The boundary between hacktivism and
cyberwarfare continues to blur.
For a full copy of the McAfee Threats Report: Fourth Quarter 2010,
please visit: http://www.mcafee.com.
About McAfee, Inc.
McAfee, headquartered in Santa Clara, California, is the world's largest
dedicated security technology company. McAfee delivers proactive and
proven solutions and services that help secure systems, networks, and
mobile devices around the world, allowing users to safely connect to the
Internet, and browse and shop the Web more securely. Backed by its
unrivaled Global Threat Intelligence, McAfee creates innovative products
that empower home users, businesses, the public sector, and service
providers by enabling them to prove compliance with regulations, protect
data, prevent disruptions, identify vulnerabilities, and continuously
monitor and improve their security. McAfee secures your digital world. http://www.mcafee.com
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