Kaspersky Lab Announced 20-Fold Increase in Fraudulent Spam in 3Q 2011
OREANDA-NEWS. November 11,
The third quarter saw the volume of phishing emails increase very slightly and account for just 0.03% of all mail traffic. The share of attacks on Facebook increased by five percentage points which meant this social network climbed from 5th to 3rd in the rating of most popular phishing targets. In previous spam reports we have mentioned how phishers have lost interest in traditional banks, and this time, for the first time ever, we saw just two banks feature in the Top
Volume of Spam Dropping
Spam levels fell steadily throughout the quarter, except for a spike in the last week of September when the share reached 82.1%. “Despite the decrease in the amount of spam in mail traffic its content has become more dangerous. The average percentage of spam with malicious attachments reached a record-breaking high of 5.3% throughout Q3. This spike, and a similar rise in adult content spam, could be the result of the summer holiday season and the ‘second wave’ of the global economic crisis. During the summer slowdown, and prompted by the uncertain financial climate, spammers look for scams that can keep them in business,” says Darya Gudkova, Head of Content Analysis and Research at Kaspersky Lab.
Think before opening attachments
Increased levels of spam with malicious attachments continued to threaten users in Q3 2011. The spammers deployed standard tricks to coax users into opening attachments, and used some new, more sophisticated methods. Among the latter, it was common to send emails with alarming subjects, an apparently encrypted text and a malicious attachment. The fraudsters were hoping that users would choose to open the attachment in the hope of making sense of the unintelligible email.
Overall, in Q3 2011 the average proportion of emails with malicious attachments increased by 1.17 percentage points, reaching 5.03%. As in the previous two quarters, Russian and
Spammer methods and tricks: hiding the evidence
Hacking legitimate sites and doctoring them with javascript code is not the only trick spammers use to keep their sites off blacklists. In Q3 2011 we came across spam emails containing links to legitimate web resources but, at the same time, carrying an SQL injection (in fact these were compromised sites which redirected users to the fraudsters’ resources). In addition, spammers continue to actively use Google cloud services to bypass filtering. By adding a link that leads to a document in the cloud they can redirect users to spammer advertising sites.
Main statistics
2011’s major trend continued in Q3: more and more spam is coming from developing countries.
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