Richard Davies wrote: The UK has a good crop of technology pioneers in cloud computing - for example ElasticHosts, FlexiScale, Flexiant, OnApp - and also some strong government initiatives such as G-Cloud.
We will have to see whether this kind of technical leadership converts into swift mass-market adoption or not.
McAfee Inc. (NYSE:MFE) today unveiled its Q4 Threats Report,
which highlights the most significant spam-generating stories in 2009 as
well as the rise of political hacktivism in countries like Poland,
Latvia, Denmark and Switzerland. Report findings also reveal that 2009
averaged approximately 135.5 billion spam messages per day, yet spam
volume decreased by 24 percent in Q4 compared to Q3.
Spammers utilized headlines heavily in 2009, taking advantage of
breaking news stories, global tragedies and timely events. The Air
France plane crash and Michael Jackson’s death were among the top
tragedies exploited by spammers last year. McAfee researchers also noted
a significant number of 2010 FIFA World Cup-themed phishing scams, Zeus
Trojans masked as the CDC, referencing the H1N1 vaccine program, and
“get-rich-quick” scams due to the rise of U.S. unemployment levels.
Politically-motivated attacks are on the rise around the world,
targeting popular social networking destinations, as seen recently with
the Iranian Cyber Army’s political attack aimed at Twitter. The report
confirms that the United States is not the sole target, nor is China the
sole origin for these types of attacks with recent political attacks
targeting the Polish government, the Copenhagen Climate Conference and
Latvia’s Independence Day.
Malware including fake security software, attacks on social networks,
and Auto-Run USB infections, continued to rise significantly last year.
Internet-based, Web 2.0-centric attacks and threats on portable storage
devices played a huge role in 2009, contributing greatly to the sheer
increase in threats and demonstrating how the nature of computer threats
are evolving over time. Cybercriminals used social networking sites to
target a new generation of victims, with Koobface activity increasing
considerably during the latter part of 2009. Koobface is now hosted by
servers in 46 different countries, with the U.S., Germany and Denmark
making up the top three hosting locations.
“In Q4, we saw spam activity drop, but identified some interesting
trends developing in terms of the geographic distribution of cyber
threats and the types of threats executed,” said Mike Gallagher, Senior
Vice President and Chief Technology Officer at McAfee Labs. “China
emerged as the worldwide leader in both zombie production and the
execution of SQL-injection attacks, while internet-based attacks played
a bigger role and will continue to do so as cybercriminals target the
most popular social destinations in 2010.”
China Overtakes the U.S. as No. 1 Country Producing Zombies
Zombie production in the U.S. dropped significantly from 13.1 percent in
Q3 to 9.5 percent in Q4, making China the top of Zombie-producing
country at 12 percent. Brazil ranked third, with Russia and Germany
rounding out the top five countries. The U.S. still remains the number
one country in terms of spam production, with Brazil and India taking
the number two and three spots. Ukraine and Germany joined the list of
top 10 countries producing spam for the first time in 2009.
The Geographic Distribution of Web Threats
North America is the worldwide leader in hosting malicious content, with
EMEA in second, followed by Asia/Pacific. In Europe, Germany holds the
number one spot, followed by the Netherlands and Italy. China is the
chief host for malicious content in Asia, followed by Russia and South
Korea. South America is beginning to play a larger role, with Brazil as
the top hosting country in that region.
China is the Worldwide Leader in SQL Injection Attacks
Although SQL-injection attacks originate from a number of countries
across the globe, China was by far the number one country hosting these
assaults at 54.4 percent. Due to the growing popularity of Adobe
applications, McAfee Labs saw a number of client-targeted attack
attempts to exploit Flash and Acrobat reader.
McAfee, Inc., headquartered in Santa Clara, California, is the world's
largest dedicated security technology company. McAfee is committed to
relentlessly tackling the world's toughest security challenges. The
company delivers proactive and proven solutions and services that help
secure systems and networks around the world, allowing users to safely
connect to the Internet, browse, and shop the web more securely. Backed
by an award-winning research team, McAfee creates innovative products
that empower home users, businesses, the public sector, and service
providers by enabling them to prove compliance with regulations, protect
data, prevent disruptions, identify vulnerabilities, and continuously
monitor and improve their security. http://www.mcafee.com.