Experts Debate Whether Cybercrime Profits Surpass Drug Trafficking

By K.C. Jones
Security PipelineThu Dec 8, 5:10 PM ET
http://news.yahoo.com/s/cmp/20051209/tc_cmp/174907893&printer=1;_ylt=AnoLlHR
gZo0nD1dgc5r76I44k4gC;_ylu=X3oDMTA3MXN1bHE0BHNlYwN0bWE-

A statement that cybercrime proceeds amounted to more than $105 billion in
2004, made Nov. 28 during a banking security conference in Riyadh, Saudi
Arabia by U.S. Treasury advisor Valerie McNevin, is sparking push-back from
experts who aren't sure it's on the mark.

McNevin's claim was reported by Reuters and widely circulated. While no one
disputes that the cost of cybercrime can be devastating, several experts are
questioning the profit claims.

"This is just total bunk," Richard Stiennon, VP of Threat Research, wrote on
on threatchaos.com.

Stiennon, a former vice president of research for Gartner Inc., has covered
security topics extensively, is not alone.

Peter Andrews questioned the statement in published reports on
complianceandprivacy.com.

"Frankly, the figures don't add up," Andrews, site community leader, said on
a discussion forum linked to his article. "They make a sensational
headline."

Andrews said research shows that spammers who send out 100 million emails
and earn $10 for each response to spam are likely to bring in only $10,000.
He said the cost to providers, anti-spam service providers and readers is at
least 10 times greater.

The definition of Cybercrime in McNevin's claim was broadened from phishing
and fraud, to include extortion, piracy, child pornography, corporate
espionage and manipulation of stocks. Despite that wider net, Top Layer
Networks CEO Peter Rendall said in an interview Thursday that it's tough to
pinpoint how much money is lost, and made, through cybercrime.

"I'm not sure where she gets her numbers from," Rendall said. "I think it's
a fact that the vast majority of cybercrime goes unreported. So, I think
they're astronomical but difficult to determine. Mot of it's coming out of
areas where the Internet laws are so lax that you can't do anything about
it."

If you take down Internet activity, you cut into company revenue, but the
total loss doesn't usually flow into a cyber criminal's hands, he said.

Those who earn their living at cybercrime are earning about $40,000 to
$60,000 per attack, Rendall said.

Of course, those targeted pay a steep price.

Reducing piracy alone would give the United States a $125 billion boost,
according to a study by the Business Software Alliance.

Rendall said one customer lost more than $3 million in profit after being
down one weekend. The cost actually is likely much higher if customer
loyalty hasn't been built and potential revenue sources are lost, he said.

Rendall agreed with McNevin that attacks appear to be proliferating while
also becoming more powerful and sophisticated. He also agreed with her point
that the pace of attacks ­ both the in way they evolve and in the way
attackers elude detection ­ presents challenges for keeping up.



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