Malware Reaches Epidemic Levels

February 11, 2008 | by Christopher Nickson

Over five million samples of malicious software were detected last year — up five times from 2006.

We know that malware is a problem, those viruses and software that attacks your PC – although it seems that those Macs are coming under the eye of virus writers these days. What’s staggering is the scope of the problem.
 
The BBC has reported that security company AV Test said it saw 5.49 million unique samples of malware, up five times from the 2006 figure, while Panda Security claimed to be getting 3,000 samples of malware daily.
 
Those are staggering figures, but even a conservative estimate from F-Secure said that figures in 2007 were double those of 2006.
 
Many of these new malware samples aren’t actually that new. All they do is take pieces from older viruses and re-assemble them in new ways.
 
"It started about nine months ago, in early 2007, we saw massive surges of new variants," explained Gerhard Eschelbeck, chief technology officer at anti-spyware firm Webroot. "There are days when we see 1,000 or more new samples. It's a low-effort high-frequency type threat. There's no completely ground-breaking new stuff out there."
 
And there’s the problem. Anti-virus programs spot program signatures, but can’t do that until people submit samples, and with the amount of malware out there, simply keeping up is a losing battle. They’re have to adapt and adopt new techniques such as heuristic or behaviour blockers to combat the problem.
 

Post Your Comment...Comments

Josh on Feb 12th, 2008 at 7:42 AM:

If you are going to make a statement like "although it seems that those Macs are coming under the eye of virus writers these days", you need to back it up with some facts.

Exactly how many Mac virus breakouts have their been? Compare that number with the statement, "5.49 million unique samples of malware, up five times from the 2006 figure".

Your comment about Macs is misleading.

(I am not a Mac user.)

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