Spam continued at record levels in February 2007, making up 93 per cent of
all email traffic monitored by internet security firm
Postini.
The continued surge is primarily down to the increase in botnets, millions of
hijacked PCs infected with malware designed to steal personal information and
distribute spam and viruses.
Total spam levels have risen 222 per cent since November 2005, and 125 per
cent of this increase has been recorded in the past six months.
Major email-borne virus attacks in January and February were aimed at
creating more botnets for future attacks.
Heightened virus activity began in late December with the 'Happy New Year'
spam attack and continued in January with the 'Storm' virus.
February saw a steady stream of attacks as hackers continued to harvest
computers to add to their botnets.
This increase meant that February broke several spam records. Postini's
global data centres processed more than two billion connections per day, and saw
data volumes grow to more than 17 terabytes in a single 24-hour period.
Average volumes of spam blocked per day rose to more than one billion for the
first time.
The dramatic increase in spam and internet attacks meant that the cost of
dealing with the problem has skyrocketed.
A new study from
Ferris
Research predicted that the global cost of spam in 2007 will reach £53bn
compared to £27bn in 2005. In the US alone, spam is expected to cost £18bn in
2007, up from £10bn two years ago.
"Following two of the largest outbreaks of email viruses in history in
December and January, spam and other attacks reached all time highs in February,
" said Daniel Druker, executive vice president of marketing at Postini.
"The rise of botnets has driven spam to £53bn business issue in 2007, making
it [vital] for all companies to seek solutions that keep their communications
safe and productive."
Postini believes that hackers are no longer relying on self-propagating
internet viruses that copy and send themselves to the email addresses on the PCs
they infect.
Instead, hackers are using botnets to launch spam attacks with viruses
attached. In this fashion, the hackers are adding hundreds of thousands more
computers to their botnets, and so the cycle continues.
Do you agree?
Have your say on this article