This report is at least a month old. 

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Renuka
Warrier
Sent: Sunday, June 07, 2009 7:03 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [AI] Web security compromised



Date:07/06/2009 URL:
http://www.thehindu.com/2009/06/07/stories/2009060760822000.htm 

National 

Web security compromised 

Deepa Kurup 

BANGALORE: The indigenous malicious code writer had his hands full all
of last year, hacking away furiously at endless reams of code, it
appears. In 2008,
India registered a sizeable increase in nefarious web activities with 12
per cent of spam detected in the Asia-Pacific/Japan region originating
from here,
as against four per cent in 2007. 

These figures, compiled in the Symantec 2008 internet security threat
report, secured the country the third position in the region with a
staggering 250
per cent increase in bot-infected computers. With an average of 836 bots
- application software that runs automated tasks over the internet - per
day,
there were 1,03,812 distinct bot-infected computers observed. Globally,
the company observed a 31 per cent increase in the same category.

Interestingly, Mumbai found itself atop this not-so-coveted list with 37
per cent of its active computers infected, followed by Chennai at 24 per
cent.
Cities with substantial internet percolation such as Delhi, Bangalore
and Hyderabad remained on the safer side, restricting their percentage
jump to a
single digit percentage rise. 

Interestingly, command-and-control bot servers, known to be the most
nefarious, increased from 40 in 2007 to 70, a figure that attributes to
inadequate
awareness about security measures. 

While web surfing remained the primary source of new infections with
attackers adopting customised toolkits to develop and distribute
threats, spammers
were seen targeting computer users' confidential information. Sale of
credit card data accounted for 52 per cent of the now well-established
underground
economy server. Symantec claims to have created more than 1.6 million
new malicious code signatures and blocked over 245 million attempted
attacks every
month. 

Worms and viruses 

Alarmingly, India ranked first in terms of prevalence of worms and
viruses attacks in the APJ region, an area that saw marginal increase
globally. Nine
of the top 10 mal-codes found in India consisted of worms (55 per cent)
and viruses (15 per cent) that disabled security-related processes,
downloaded
additional threats and stole confidential information. 

In fact, 65 per cent of worms and viruses here are propagated through
the simple file sharing/executables, - even through free downloads,
freeware and shareware
versions of software - pointing to a clear lapse in simple endpoint
security and policy. 

A more recent Symantec India 2009 Security and Storage survey explains
to a certain extent the surge in security breaches in 2008. This survey,
covering
verticals ranging from financial services to retail and real estate,
names two stumbling blocks at the operational level: inadequate budgets
and ineffective
information security management at the operational level. 


To unsubscribe send a message to [email protected]
with the subject unsubscribe.

To change your subscription to digest mode or make any other changes,
please visit the list home page at
 
http://accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/accessindia_accessindia.org.i
n

Email secured by TPML Raksha Checkpoint



To unsubscribe send a message to [email protected] with 
the subject unsubscribe.

To change your subscription to digest mode or make any other changes, please 
visit the list home page at
  http://accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/accessindia_accessindia.org.in

Reply via email to