Cyber criminals have fewers ways to attack Microsoft Windows, and for the first time ever are sent less spam in 2010 than in 2009.

Microsoft has been active in the last few years tracking down various botnets to eradicate networks of cybercrime. Their last successful botnet elimination was the Waldec botnet. Now, at the RSA Conference Europe 2010 in London,  Microsoft  shared evidence to the community from their latest Microsoft Security Intelligence Report (SIRv9), which provides security intelligence on the extent to which botnets, and those supporting them, have become a pivotal for committing cybercrime.

1ff estonia map w 400x275 The Latest on Botnet Cybercrime

Botnets have become the launching pad for a lot of today’s cyber criminal activity.  Botnets are a valuable asset for their owners, the bot herders,  who make money by leasing them out to other cyber criminals, or hackers, in order to use them as a route to market their cybercrime attacks. They may be involved  spam attacks, phishing attacks,click fraud,  identity theft,  and the distribution of scam emails.  In many ways, they are the perfect base of operations for computer criminals.

2botnets The Latest on Botnet Cybercrime

Bot herders guard their botnets and invest large amounts of time, effort, and money in developing and making them work to their full capability. They spread their bots by a central command system to thousands or millions of computer users through the distribution of malicious software or user deception. However, they keep a low profile so bots are able to infiltrate computers and devices. They can quietly operate in the background, sometime not even detected for years. The bad thing is that depending on the nature of the bot, an hack attacker may end up with as much or more control over their victim’s computer than has the user.

3messagelabs globalriskindex jan09 400x309 The Latest on Botnet Cybercrime

And the Good New Is?

The good news is that with aggressive, and creative disruption efforts by several groups, the software industry, law enforcement agencies, government entities, and academics; these are all leaving an impact on botnets. There have been successful botnet takedowns against Waledac and the Mariposa botnets. Microsoft led the way on the Waldec and Spanish authorities were successful in the Mariposa bot takedown. These takedowns occured between April and June 2010.

In another development,  Microsoft cleaned botnet infections from more than 6.5 million computers worldwide. And another piece of good news is that the number of industry disclosed vulnerabilities continues to decline; eight percent in the second quarter of 2010 as compared the previous three months. Furthermore, since 2006, Microsoft has seen a 75 percent increase in people using Microsoft’s automatic update service, which contains security updates, and fixes vulnerabilities.

Worldwide Botnet Infections 400x184 The Latest on Botnet Cybercrime

Related posts:

  1. Operation B49: Waledac Botnet Take Down
  2. The Waledac Botnet – RIP
  3. Virus prevents XP users getting latest security patches
  4. Microsoft releases 49 Security Patches
  5. Malware levels 71% higher than in 2008

When Microsoft released its latest operating system, Windows 7, it was perceived as the company’s most secure launch ever — the consumation of a nine-year “Trustworthy Computing” effort to sustain a product line that had been riddled with major security holes.

Microsoft had years to enhance Windows XP, but the Conficker worm, which started spreading last year, is now thought to have infected more than 7 million Windows machines. And for every Windows bug that gets crushed, hackers appear to find new problems in the software that runs on top of Microsoft’s operating system such as Flash Player, QuickTime and Java.

The chief technology officer with Immunity, a security company that spends a lot of time finding the new software bugs states that Windows 7 is definitely by far the most secure system Microsoft has launched.

The one of the official of Microsoft revealed the statement in a recent interview that states that they had made great progress with respect to security around the core OS technology in the Windows PC. But as they did that and the net became more prevalent, the bad guys continued to evolve their attacks.

Windows may be safer, but cyber-criminals still have lot of other places to attack, they can hit hundreds of millions of users with a single attack. So most of the worst attacks today targets PCs running Windows. This arises question whether the operating system itself is secure or not.

Attackers are getting so good at sending highly customized e-mail messages, complete with malicious attachments, that the security of Windows seems nothing.

The director of research for the SANS Institute, a security training company states that the problem with the targeted attacks is that there is so much money that they can actually trump the security and the amount of money that governments and large industrial crime groups have to spend is enough to trump any of the defenses they have.

In a report published one month back for a congressional advisory panel, one of the analysts detailed exactly how this happens. Looking at attacks that have been occured, the report found that targets are carefully chosen, and then sent very believable e-mails with falsely encoded attachments that exploit bugs in a product such as Adobe Reader, something that’s outside of Microsoft’s control. As soon as victim opens the .pdf suddenly attackers have a command over the network.

Several Microsoft customers think there will be much wider enterprise adoption of Windows 7 than there was with Vista, which was widely ignored by corporate users. One of the customer wrote that as long as third-party patching continues to be a challenge, client security will continue to be at the front of information security defense and incident response. Windows 7 won’t significantly decrease client-side attacks that lead to compromises, but Microsoft either can not bear the burden of it.

According to Microsoft, it can go a long way toward solving this type of problem by enhancing the way people connect each other on the Internet. For the past few years it has advocated an idea it calls “end-to-end” trust, saying it wants to develop better association mechanisms for people, computers and software on the Internet.

Normal 0 false false false EN-US X-NONE X-NONE MicrosoftInternetExplorer4

When Microsoft released its latest operating system, Windows 7, it was perceived as the company’s most secure launch ever — the consumation of a nine-year “Trustworthy Computing” effort to sustain a product line that had been riddled with major security holes.

Microsoft had years to enhance Windows XP, but the Conficker worm, which started spreading last year, is now thought to have infected more than 7 million Windows machines. And for every Windows bug that gets crushed, hackers appear to find new problems in the software that runs on top of Microsoft’s operating system such as Flash Player, QuickTime and Java.

The chief technology officer with Immunity, a security company that spends a lot of time finding the new software bugs states that Windows 7 is definitely by far the most secure system Microsoft has launched.

The one of the official of Microsoft revealed the statement in a recent interview that states that they had made great progress with respect to security around the core OS technology in the Windows PC. But as they did that and the net became more prevalent, the bad guys continued to evolve their attacks.

Windows may be safer, but cyber-criminals still have lot of other places to attack, they can hit hundreds of millions of users with a single attack. So most of the worst attacks today targets PCs running Windows. This arises question whether the operating system itself is secure or not.

Attackers are getting so good at sending highly customized e-mail messages, complete with malicious attachments, that the security of Windows seems nothing.

The director of research for the SANS Institute, a security training company states that the problem with the targeted attacks is that there is so much money that they can actually trump the security and the amount of money that governments and large industrial crime groups have to spend is enough to trump any of the defenses they have.

In a report published one month back for a congressional advisory panel, one of the analysts detailed exactly how this happens. Looking at attacks that have been occured, the report found that targets are carefully chosen, and then sent very believable e-mails with falsely encoded attachments that exploit bugs in a product such as Adobe Reader, something that’s outside of Microsoft’s control. As soon as victim opens the .pdf suddenly attackers have a command over the network.

Several Microsoft customers think there will be much wider enterprise adoption of Windows 7 than there was with Vista, which was widely ignored by corporate users. One of the customer wrote that as long as third-party patching continues to be a challenge, client security will continue to be at the front of information security defense and incident response. Windows 7 won’t significantly decrease client-side attacks that lead to compromises, but Microsoft either can not bear the burden of it.

According to Microsoft, it can go a long way toward solving this type of problem by enhancing the way people connect each other on the Internet. For the past few years it has advocated an idea it calls “end-to-end” trust, saying it wants to develop better association mechanisms for people, computers and software on the Internet.

Richard Wilson is a technical expert with iYogi. iYogi a Computer, computer help and technical support vendor is the winner of Red Herring Top 100 Award. iYogi provides microsoft support, windows vista repair, computer support, microsoft support, dell support, computer repair, computer tech support etc. by Microsoft Certified Technician.

Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes
© 2011 Windows 7 Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha

Powered by Yahoo! Answers