Many users remain infected with computer malware – despite the fact
that the vast majority are running machines protected by anti-virus
software.

A study by European Union statistics agency EUROSTAT found that one
third of PC users (31 per cent) had the pox even though the vast
majority (84 per cent) were running security software (anti-virus,
anti-spam, firewall) on their PCs. Of the survey's respondents, 3 per
cent reported financial loss as a result of farming or phishing
attacks, while a further 4 per cent reported privacy violations
involving data sent online.

Bulgaria (58 per cent) and Malta (50 per cent) top the list of most
infected users. By comparison, Finland (20 per cent), Ireland (15 per
cent) and Austria (14 per cent) did relatively well.

Trojans (59.2 per cent) were the most common types of infected found
on compromised PCs, followed by viruses (11.7 per cent).

A separate study by antivirus firm Panda, also published this week,
tells a similar story. Half (50 per cent) of the computers scanned by
Panda in January harboured malware. As with the EU study, Trojans were
the single greatest problem – accounting for 59.2 per cent of
problems). Machines in Thailand, China, Taiwan, Russia and Turkey were
the most commonly affected. Panda's figures come from users of its
Active Scan tool.

Panda published the study in order to illustrate its long-standing
argument that the use of cloud-based architectures is needed in order
to stand any chance of keeping the growing volume of malware producers
by cybercrooks and mischief-makers in check

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