Emerging markets face higher cyberthreat risk

By Vivian Yeo, ZDNet Asia
Wednesday, January 14, 2009 05:52 PM

Emerging markets such as the BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India and China) economies are at higher risk of being exposed to cyberthreats, according to a new report from security vendor MessageLabs.

Released Wednesday, the MessageLabs Intelligence: 2008 Annual Security Report noted that Brazil had the world's biggest share of global bots, at nearly 10 percent. Turkey and China were ranked No. 2 and No. 3, with respective shares of about 9 percent, and over 7 percent. Russia and India were also among the top five.

Turkey, however, emerged as most at-risk of exposure to cyberthreats, according to the report. It had a score of 4.9 on an index indicating the global risk exposure, which also takes into account the Internet population of individual countries. Russia had a score of 3.1, Brazil 2.8 and India 1.5. With its large Internet population, China's index score was a mere 0.4, comparable with that of the United States.

Global risk index - exposure to botnets
Source: MessageLabs

China's top-level domain, .cn, is also the second-most blocked domains containing malware, after .com top-level domain, which accounted for more than half (53.9 percent) of malicious domains blocked. Malicious sites registered under the .cn top-level country code accounted for 17.4 percent of sites blocked, while third-place Russian .ru domains accounted for 12.2 percent.

The report pointed out that the increasing demand for .cn domains puts the country at risk for cybercrime. Citing statistics from the China Internet Network Information Center, MessageLabs said there are 1.92 million Web sites hosted in China, with 71.3 percent hosted under the .cn top-level country code domain.

MessageLabs, which is now part of Symantec, also reported that an average of 53 Trojan attacks were intercepted daily last year, with a peak of 78 a day in April. This was five times higher than the 10 daily in 2007.

The messaging security specialist also warned that in the year ahead, malware "mashups" will become more common. Web 2.0 would pave the way for contextual malware, which "can consolidate multiple dynamic data streams to create a malicious environment from a number of diverse, unrelated sources", said MessageLabs. Malware will also become more disposable as cybercriminals look for newer and faster ways to change their attack code to make it undetectable by improved antivirus systems.

Other MessageLabs predictions about the security landscape in 2009:

  • Cloud-based computing environments, in which data and information are stored or processed on servers that hold up the Internet, will become increasingly targeted in 2009.
  • Phishing attacks will focus on exploiting vulnerable DNS domains and Web sites, and less on the traditional approach of hosting the domains that look like or are a misspelling of legitimate sites.
  • Mobile attacks will become more malicious as criminals devise ways to make money by further exploiting these devices. While MessageLabs noted that there were 300 mobile viruses in circulation compared with 400,000 PC-based threats, mobile threats will parallel PC attack numbers.
  • Major botnets will find hosting services in countries such as Russia, Brazil or China, precipitating an improvement in botnet technology creating a new vanguard for networks of zombie computers.

Corporate blackmailing on the rise?
Separately, McAfee has predicted that corporate blackmailing will, among other trends, increase in 2009. In its report released Wednesday, the security vendor said cybercriminals will increasingly use botnets to gather sensitive data on corporate networks and data centers, to blackmail companies or sell on the underground economy. Browser-based attacks will also increasingly be used as the "least protected vector in order to transfer payload".


WORTHWHILE?

0

0 votes
Blog

Talkback 0 comments

There are currently no comments for this post.


Tech Jobs Now!

Search for your ideal tech job:

A look at the Terminal Services Manager in Windows Server 2008

Windows Server

Terminal Services Manager has been around for a while, but Microsoft made some changes to the utility in Windows Server 2008. Here's what you'll find.


Read more »



Open source blog reloaded!

Blog thumbnail

This is with great pleasure that this "little corner of the Web" is resuming activities through another member of the (now famous ;-)) Beijing Linux User Group (BLUG) doing the..... by Fred Muller

Read more »

Tags

  1. attack
  2. authentication and encryption
  3. blog
  4. data security
  5. e - mail
  6. google inc.
  7. internet
  8. malware
  9. microsoft corp.
  10. network
  11. network security
  12. pc security
  13. researcher
  14. security
  15. security management
  16. software
  17. spam and phishing
  18. symantec corp.
  19. viruses and worms
  20. web