INTEL : McAfee Q1 Threats Report Reveals Surge in Malware and Drop in Spam
06/01/2011| 12:05am US/Eastern

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McAfee
today released the McAfee
Threats Report: First Quarter 2011 . With six million
unique samples of recorded malware, Q1 2011 was the most active first
quarter in malware history. The report revealed many of the trends that
had a significant impact on the threat landscape, such as the takedown
of the Rustock botnet, which resulted in spam remaining at its lowest
levels since 2007, and confirmed that mobile malware is the new frontier
of cybercrime.
Credit: McAfee
"The Q1 Threats Report indicates that it's been a busy start to 2011 for
cybercriminals," said Vincent Weafer, senior vice president, McAfee
Labs. "Even though this past quarter once again showed that spam has
slowed, it doesn't mean that cybercriminals aren't actively pursuing
alternate avenues. We're seeing a lot of emerging threats, such as
Android malware and new botnets attempting to take over where Rustock
left off, that will have a significant impact on the activity we see
quarter after quarter."
Busiest Quarter in History for Malware
With more than six million unique malware samples in Q1, this period far
exceeds any first quarter in malware history. February 2011 saw the most
new malware samples of the quarter, at approximately 2.75 million
samples. Fake anti-virus software had a very active quarter as well,
reaching its highest levels in more than a year, totaling 350,000 unique
fake-alert samples in March 2011.
Malware Attacks on Android Devices
Malware no longer affects just PCs. As Android devices have grown in
popularity, the platform solidified its spot as the second most popular
environment for mobile malware behind Symbian OS during the first three
months of the year.
A McAfee Labs mobile application security whitepaper, released today in
conjunction with this McAfee Threats Report, discusses how most
Android devices allow the "side-loading" of apps and are not restricted
to getting them from a centralized app store, and there is no
centralized place where Google can check all apps for suspicious
behavior. (See Downloading
from Mobile App Stores Is a Risky Business.) The
researcher Lompolo recently found a series of Android applications
carrying backdoor Trojans in the Android Market and, with the estimated
download rate of tens of thousands to the hundreds of thousands, the
number of users who could be affected is significant. In Q1 2011 McAfee
Labs found that the most prominent types of Android mobile malware were
Android/DrdDream, Android/Drad, Android/SteamyScr.A and Android/Bgyoulu,
which affected everything from games to apps to SMS data.
The cybercriminals behind the Zeus crimeware toolkit have also directed
attacks toward the mobile platform, creating new versions of Zitmo
mobile malware for both Symbian and Windows Mobile systems to steal user
bank-account information.
Rustock and Zeus Takedowns Result in Spam Decline
The takedown of the Rustock botnet resulted in the shutoff of major
zombies and command structures that caused spam volumes to fall all over
the world. Spam, which has been at its lowest levels since 2007 in the
past few quarters, significantly dropped once again to less than half of
what it was only a year ago--at approximately 1.5 trillion messages per
day, outnumbering legitimate email traffic by only a 3:1 ratio.
Although Zeus botnet development has declined, the author has apparently
shifted efforts to merging the Zeus source code with the SpyEye botnet,
resulting in large-scale threats affecting banking and online
transactions. As of March 2011, the most recent SpyEye botnet can thrive
on more than 150 modules, such as USB thumb drives, instant messaging
and Firefox certificates.
Spam may be at its lowest levels in years, but many botnets are in the
position to fill the gap left by the decline of Rustock and Zeus; the
competition includes Maazben, Bobaz, Lethic, Cutwail and Grum. There was
a strong uptick in new botnet infections toward the end of Q1, most
likely due to the reseeding process, where cybercriminals slow down
activity in order to spend time rebuilding botnets. The botnet takedowns
have resulted in an increase in the price of sending spam on the
underground marketplace, showing that the laws of supply and demand also
apply to cybercrime.
Popular Lures
Cybercriminals often disguise malicious content by using popular "lures"
to trick unsuspecting users. Spam promoting phony or real products was
the most popular lure in most global regions. In Russia and South Korea,
drug spam was the most popular; and in Australia and China, fake
delivery status notifications were among the most popular. Q1 also
brought a new trend among "banker" Trojans, malware that steal passwords
and other data, that use popular lures in their spam campaigns such as
UPS, FedEx, USPS and the IRS.
McAfee Labs saw some significant spikes in malicious web content that
corresponded with high-impact news events such as the Japanese
earthquake and tsunami and major sporting events, with an average of
8,600 new bad sites per day. In the same vein, within the top 100
results of each of the daily top search terms, nearly 50 percent led to
malicious sites, and on average contained more than two malicious links.
For more information on trends related to cybercrime, hacktivism, web
threats, vulnerabilities and network attacks, please download a full
copy of the McAfee Threats Report: First Quarter 2011 at http://www.mcafee.com/us/resources/reports/rp-quarterly-threat-q1-2011.pdf.
About McAfee
McAfee, a wholly owned subsidiary of Intel Corporation (NASDAQ:INTC), 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, 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 is relentlessly focused on constantly finding new ways to keep
our customers safe. http://www.mcafee.com
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McAfee
Joris Evers, 408-346-3310
joris_evers@mcafee.com
or
H3O
Communications
Heather Edell, 415-618-8814
heather@h3ocommunications.com
© Business Wire 2011
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