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2006 Declared Year Of The Zombies

Daniel Fleshbourne   on 28 December 2006 - 01:28 · 3 comments & 2161 views

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Broadband-connected computers commandeered by spammers drove a 30% increase in the amount of spam headed to consumer e-mail boxes and corporate networks, an e-mail security firm says. Remotely controlled armies of computers, called zombies, spread to all regions of the world in 2006, with as many as 8 million computers spewing billions of junk e-mails on any given day, Commtouch said Wednesday in its 2006 Spam Trends Report.

New sophisticated spamming techniques overcame traditional anti-spam methods, such as content filtering, heuristics, and IP address blacklisting, the report said. Among the more effective new techniques was the use of image-based spam, which is much harder for security software to detect than text-based spam. The former accounted for 70% of the bandwidth taken up by spam this year, Commtouch said. "Spam outbreaks got bigger, faster, and smarter during 2006," said Amir Lev, Commtouch president and chief technology officer, in a statement.

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News source: CRN

Post a comment · Send to friend Comments · There are 3 additional comments
#1 crimsonhead on 28 Dec 2006 - 01:31
Also, Dead Rising kicks major ass!
#2 guylaroche on 28 Dec 2006 - 01:58
I friggin' hate spam.... Will it ever stop?
#3 Unplugged on 02 Jan 2007 - 15:20
I dont see why its an issue.

Is there actually ANYOE stupid enougth to buy drugs or a watch from an e-mail and unknown source?

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