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Spyware ::: A Right Royal Pain!

Spyware are pieces of software that are advertised as Freeware or Adware but that install in your computer, generally without your knowledge, some are  programs that run in the background collecting data about what web sites you go to, your personal information, the games you play, the software you use, etc, all without your permission. The software will then send this information back to the creator's servers where it is collected. .

Bogus emails ::: The facts about Phishing

It seems hardly a day goes by without word of some clever new “phishing” scam taking place. These sophisticated attacks use “spoofed” emails and fraudulent Web sites designed to fool recipients into divulging personal financial data such as credit card numbers.....

Viruses:  Double the trouble of last year...


The proportion of emails containing viruses has almost doubled year-on-year, and the blame is being laid at the door of home users.

Virus-scanning firm MessageLabs said it stopped 9.3 million viruses in two billion emails this year, which equated to one virus in every 215 emails. This is compared to 1.8 million viruses stopped in 718 million emails in 2001, or one virus in every 398 emails.

According to the report, which measured results up to the end of the second week of December, the most active virus was Klez.H with 4.9 million copies stopped by MessageLabs. Yaha.E came second with 1.1 million copies, then it was Bugbear.A with 842,333.

These figures only represent the numbers stopped by MessageLabs for its corporate customers. The actual numbers of these viruses are much higher.

Although Klez was the most active virus, Bugbear was the most dramatic outbreak of the year, infecting one in every 87 emails at its height in October. Its dual-mode attack saw it accounting for 30 per cent of all reports of viruses to antivirus Sophos in the last month - well ahead of former top spot incumbent Klez, which by then only accounted for around eight per cent of all reports in third place.

Klez could only reach one in every 169 even at its peak, while Yaha never rose above one every 268, said MessageLabs. The two most dramatic outbreaks of all time recorded by MessageLabs remain Goner, at one in 30 last December, and the number one LoveBug, which hit one in every 28 in May 2000.

Alex Shipp, senior antivirus technologist at MessageLabs, said the more prevalent viruses owed their success to the fact that people found them hard to spot. "This is because these are able to 'spoof' email addresses, so that the identity of the real sender is difficult to trace," said Shipp. "It also means that by mass mailing contacts from a recipient's address book, further victims are likely to open the rogue email, because they think it is from someone they know and trust."

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