Hi All,

  A growing number of cyber threats are associated with the popularity of
online music and videos, according to a McAfee report. Researchers found
that adding the word “free” to searches increases the risk of landing on a
malicious site.

McAfee also revealed that cybercriminals hide malicious content in music and
movie-related sites, and even fan clubs sites.

In recent years, as consumers have increasingly watched video or downloaded
music online, cybercriminals have shifted their attacks to include more
dangerous websites, malicious ads and video viewing tools. According to
comScore, more than 177 million U.S. Internet users watched online video in
June, up from 157 million a year ago. As downloading of digital content has
increased, so have the dangers associated with it.

The research found that adding the word “free” to a search for music
ringtones resulted in a 300 percent increase in the riskiness of sites
returned by major search engines in English. The word “free” in other
languages yielded similar results.

Searching for “MP3s” added risk to music search results, while searching for
“free MP3s” made those searches even riskier. Even when a consumer indicated
that they wanted to pay for the MP3 in their search, results still sent them
to pirated content.

McAfee also discovered thousands of malicious and highly suspicious URLs
associated with fan clubs or comments made on social media sites, such as
YouTube and Twitter. Malicious advertising or “malvertising,” where an ad is
used to distribute malware or exploit the user’s browser, is a common means
of infection. For instance, McAfee identified “malvertising” on
perezhilton.com as recently as June that redirected users to a domain that
delivered malicious software.

“Consumers are visiting fan sites, downloading movies and reading celebrity
news, but generally aren’t aware of the risks,” said Paula Greve, director
of web security research for McAfee. “They can access ‘free’ content quickly
and easily, but it comes at a price. Consumers must stay aware of the risks
and be on the lookout for potential new dangers.”

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