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Significant growth in user-generated content has led to new Internet security threats, according to a new report by Commtouch.
The fourth quarter 2008 Internet Threats Trend Report, out today, is based on the automated analysis of billions of email messages and Web sites in real-time at Commtouch's Global Detection Centers.

The report found streaming media and downloads are among the top 10 Web site categories infected with malware and /or manipulated by phishing. These are two of the most popular categories within user generated content sites.
McColo, one of the largest host of cyber-criminal gangs, was shut down in November 2008, causing spam levels to fall to one -third their usual level for a number of weeks. Spam levels averaged 72 percent of all email traffic during the quarter, dipping briefly to 59 percent following the McColo closing in November.

An average of 301,000 zombies were newly activated each day for malicious activity. Brazil led in zombie computer activity, producing 14.6 percent of zombies by the end of the quarter.
"With user generated content on blogs, file sharing platforms and social networks having experienced huge growth over the last few years, spammers and malicious script writers are finding new ways to engage users," said Amir Lev, chief technology officer of Commtouch.
"An increasing number of blended threats have emerged as new opportunities to infect users' machines have arisen. These kinds of sites have become targets for new, more elaborative schemes, and users, vendors and service providers must beware and employ protection measures
FriendFeed Offers Real-Time Search
3 Comments
Microsoft should take actions
I think the best way is to ask Microsoft to improve their antivirus softwareand firewall software. Most OS are windows so Microsoft know the best to fix the bugs in the operating system.
Change Antivirus scheme
Idea:
Require Microsoft and Apple to implement a full-system antivirus/whatever functionality that integrates into every facet of the system and is included *free* with the operating system. This might help automatically set up people who don't understand the need or might not want to pay other companies for some seemingly unnecessary addition. That's the only way I see hunkering down on things and having a system that would quickly repair loopholes and other vulnerabilities. It should be deemed a defect in the operating system to not have this in place.
Yeah, uh huh, we'll see
I find most malware that
I find most malware that gets on PCs comes from javascript that exploits security holes.
For downloading stuff, there's always been the risk that some unknown file is a virus, since the 90s and earlier.
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