2009 H2 records 225 percent growth in malicious websites

By siliconindia   |   Thursday, 04 February 2010, 21:24 IST   |    3 Comments
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2009 H2 records 225 percent growth in malicious websites
Mumbai: Websense Security Labs identified that 13.7 percent of searches for trending news/buzz words (as defined by Yahoo Buzz & Google Trends) led to malware. Search engine optimization poisoning attacks target the top searches enabling hackers to drive traffic to their sites. Overall, comparing the second half of 2009 with the same period in 2008, there has been an average growth of 225 percent in malicious websites. Websense Chief Technology Officer Dan Hubbard said, "Malicious hackers are really focusing their efforts to ensure they're driving their victims straight to them. By poisoning search results and focusing on Web 2.0 sites, their efforts are often more efficient and effective. The blended nature of today's threats combined with compromised legitimate sites, takes full advantage of an increased perception of trust when using search engines and interacting with friends or acquaintances online." In contrast to the first half of the year where mass injection attacks like Gumblar, Beladen and Nine Ball promoted a sharp rise in the number of malicious websites, Websense Security Labs has seen a 3.3 percent decline in the growth of the number of websites compromised. Malware authors have replaced their traditional scattergun approach with focused efforts on Web 2.0 properties with higher traffic and multiple pages. Web 2.0 sites allowing user-generated content are top target for cybercriminals and spammers. Websense Defensio technology enabled Websense Security Labs to identify that 95 percent of user-generated comments to blogs, chat rooms and message boards are spam or malicious. Malware authors continue to capitalize on website reputation and exploiting user trust with the second half of 2009 revealing 71 percent of Web sites with malicious code are legitimate sites that have been compromised. Websense Security Labs found that 35 percent of malicious web attacks included data-stealing code, demonstrating that attackers are after essential information and data. The web continues to be the most popular vector for data-stealing attacks. In the second half of 2009 the Websense Security Labs found that 58 percent of data-stealing attacks are conducted over the web. Websense Security Labs identified that 85.8 percent of all emails were spam. During the second half of the year, 81 percent of emails contained a malicious link.