India home for Phishing Emails

By siliconindia   |   Wednesday, 25 May 2011, 22:52 IST   |    1 Comments
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Bangalore: IBM has recently released results from its annual X-Force 2010 Trend and Risk Report. The report highlights that public and private organizations around the world faced increasingly sophisticated, customized IT security threats in 2010. According to the report India was the top country for phishing email origination in 2010 at 15.5 percent, followed by Russia at 10.4 percent. Spam has continued to incline and grow continuously in India from spring 2009 to autumn 2010. The report also states that U.S., India, Brazil, and Vietnam were the top four spam-sending countries, accounting for nearly one third of worldwide spam. Based on the intelligence gathered through research of public vulnerability disclosures, and the monitoring and analysis of more than 150,000 security events per second during every day of 2010, key observations from the IBM X-Force Research team includes that more than 8,000 new vulnerabilities were documented, a 27 percent rise from 2009. Public exploit releases were also up 21 percent from 2009 to 2010. This data points to an expanding threat landscape in which sophisticated attacks are being launched against increasingly complex computing environments. The historically high growth in spam volume leveled off by the end of 2010. This indicates that spammers may be seeing less value from increasing the volume of spam, and instead are focused on making sure it is bypassing filters. While overall there were significantly fewer phishing attacks relative to previous years, "spear phishing," a more targeted attack technique, grew in importance in 2010. This further indicates that cyber criminals have become more focused on quality of attacks, rather than quantity. India along with USA, Brazil, Vietnam, and Russia are the top five countries for spam origination in 2010. As end user adoption of smartphones and other mobile devices increased, IT security departments have struggled to determine the right way to bring these devices safely into corporate networks. Although attacks against the latest generation of mobile devices were not yet widely prevalent in 2010, IBM X-Force data showed a rise in vulnerability disclosures and exploits that target these devices. The report also discusses the security trends and best practices for the emerging technologies of mobile devices and cloud computing. The report highlighted a shift in perception about cloud security as adoption continued to evolve and knowledge around this emerging technology increased. Organizations are increasingly concerned about the security implications of personal mobile devices used by employees. Organizations must ensure control of their data regardless of where it is, including employee-owned or business-issued smartphones.