There has been a sharp hike in the volume of cyber-crime attacks designed to
steal personal information, new research reveals.
Microsoft's most recent Security
Intelligence Report shows that attackers are increasingly targeting
personal information to make a profit. The report found that during the first
half of 2007, 31.6 million phishing scams were detected, an increase of more
than 150 per cent over the previous six months.
The study also shows a 500 per cent increase in Trojan downloaders and
droppers, malicious code used to install files such as Trojans, password
stealers, keyboard loggers and other malware on users' systems. Two notable
families of Trojans detected are specifically targeted at stealing data and
banking information.
The Redmond company also released findings from a recent survey of more than
3,600 security, privacy and marketing executives across a variety of industries
in the United States, the United Kingdom and Germany, including financial
services, healthcare, technology and government. Conducted by the Ponemon
Institute LLC, the study found that as security threats increasingly target
personal information, more collaboration among security and privacy officers is
critical to avoid costly compromises or breaches of personal information.
The study for the Microsoft Trustworthy Computing Group, titled
Microsoft Study on Data Protection and Role Collaboration Within
Organisations, found that organisations with poor collaboration were more
than twice as likely as organisations with good collaboration to have suffered a
data breach in the past two years.
Scott Charney, corporate vice president of Microsoft's Trustworthy Computing
Group, said: "As a company committed to providing privacy and security solutions
for our customers, we will continue to evolve our products, practices and
processes as security and privacy become increasingly interdependent and as
threats evolve.
"There is no one-size-fits-all solution for organisations looking to
effectively collaborate and protect data, but we hope this research will be a
good resource for companies thinking about how to approach this."
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