The proliferation of temporary websites being set up by criminals is a growing threat
R E L A T E D   C O N T E N T
ADVERTISEMENT

Domain 'kiting' threat on the rise

Scammers using 'disposable domains' for criminal gain

Matt Chapman, vnunet.com 05 Jun 2006
ADVERTISEMENT

The proliferation of temporary websites being set up by criminals is a growing threat, according to web security firm MessageLabs

"Disposable domains are becoming a larger problem via a tactic known as 'domain kiting' in which cyber-criminals acquire domains without paying for them and use them for illegal gains," said Mark Sunner, chief technology officer at MessageLabs.

Domain kiting registrars create small websites crammed with links using domain names for which they do not pay. They generate money when innocent surfers land on the page and click on the links. The scam takes advantage of the domain name system's five-day refund period.

Despite this practice, the monthly MessageLabs Intelligence Report found that the overall threat levels for May remained relatively stable.

Malaysia saw the largest increase in virus attacks during the month, with one in 15 emails carrying a piece of malware. But the worst hit country was still India, which saw one in 9.6 emails infected with a virus.

Hong Kong and Israel were the most spammed countries, with junk mail levels running at 64 per cent.

Sunner explained that the spam threat is now worse because the technology to take control of users' PCs had moved on.

"Cyber-criminals have become more adept at harvesting infected computer address books and using simple techniques to amplify their reach," he said.

"This has turned the traditional botnet or zombie into a virtual spam cannon capable of blasting out millions of emails a day."

MessageLabs found that the global ratio of spam in email traffic in May from new and unknown bad sources was 57.9 per cent. This translated as one in 1.7 emails and is an increase of 0.6 per cent from April.

Meanwhile, the global ratio of viruses in email traffic from new sources was one in every 67.1 emails, a decrease of 0.3 per cent from April's figures.

See also:

Security experts have discovered the first virus that targets Sun Microsystems' StarOffice application suiteProof-of-concept malware discovered in the wild  02 Jun 2006
Delayed till 2007 as Microsoft gets in first  01 Jun 2006
Microsoft has started selling its OneCare security software in the US at a fee of $49.95 for up to three computersMore than antivirus, says Redmond  31 May 2006
Panda Software launched a campaign this week designed to help surfers recognise and defend against phishing scamsSecurity firm offers 10 Tips to Combat Phishing  23 May 2006
Chubu Electric suffers second information leak in four months  18 May 2006
An odd worm is circulating through computer systems trying to print off images of a fake owl on network printersWorm sends image of an owl to a number of predefined print queues  12 May 2006
A new Trojan was spammed out last night posing as a free wall chart that lets users track their team's progress in the World Cup finalsHaxdoor-IN alters registry files and installs more malware  05 May 2006

All Enterprise Security Technology

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story

M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links
F E A T U R E D   J O B S
| Aston Carter
C++ Research Developer Global Pharmaceutical Company London C++ Research Developer Biotechology Global Medical Company London Global Biotechnology Company specialising in the research and development of cutting edge health care products is looking for an innovative, ... more >
| Aston Carter
Your role will be working on direct market access and exchange connectivity part of the application built in C++ on a Unix platform. The team is currently just 9 people including architect and team lead, ... more >
| Aston Carter
This is a fantastic opportunity working for a leading global software house, which is part of a larger multi media company. The role is working in the core development team in central London developing a ... more >
| Aston Carter
C++, Developer, OO, Unix/NT, API, London, City, Graduate A senior core C++/ Unix developer wanting to work in the heart of the city for one of London's most successful companies is required. The successful candidate ... more >
More job opportunities