Celebrities are a bigger lure than sex when it comes to getting users to download adware or spyware
Adware and spyware distributors are abusing the affiliate marketing programmes of legitimate companies
R E L A T E D   C O N T E N T
ADVERTISEMENT

Celebs bigger than sex in adware war

Adware and spyware has risen by 1,000 per cent since 2003

Matt Chapman, vnunet.com 11 Sep 2006
ADVERTISEMENT

Celebrities are a bigger lure than sex when it comes to getting users to download adware or spyware, according to research by an antivirus vendor.

The common view that adult and pornography websites are the most prolific distributors of malware has been challenged by stats collected by McAfee SiteAdvisor

McAfee said that its research proved that adware and spyware distributors are abusing the affiliate marketing programmes of legitimate companies. 

"In addition, adware distributors use front companies and websites to reach unsuspecting users and intermediaries, meaning that legitimate sites are finding themselves tied to known spyware distributors," the report said.

These programs then install themselves on a user's machine, often as the trade-off for a piece of 'free' software, and are used to collect marketing data and distribute targeted advertising.

"The emergence of lucrative online affiliate-marketing business models, and the widespread ease with which adware and spyware can be spread, have made them prominent features in the threat landscape," said Jeff Green, senior vice president of product development at McAfee.

McAfee explained that the amount of adware and spyware is increasing at an exponential rate, and by August 2006 there were approximately 450 adware families with more than 4,000 variants.

"From 2003 to 2006, we have seen the number of adware families rise by more than 1,000 per cent," said Green.

He added that the lucrative nature of the adware business model made it a big draw, as witnessed by a recent criminal indictment alleging that Jeanson James Ancheta, a convicted bot-herder, received $150 (£81) for each of 1,000 infected computers.

See also:

The vast majority of malware is created with criminal intent as black-hat hackers turn from technical one-upmanship to seeking real financial gainHackers creating increasing numbers of Trojans and bots for financial gain  06 Sep 2006
One in 600 profiles host infection  10 Aug 2006
Phishing attack detected yesterday  09 Aug 2006
Endpoint Security suite also carries adware detection  07 Jun 2006
Adware is designed to serve advertisements to the user, often through pop-upsBlacklist causes some advertisers to cancel adware contracts  24 Mar 2006
Adware is designed to serve advertisements to the user, often through pop-ups, and is based on the sites that a user visitsSeveral companies named and shamed  21 Mar 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
| MI6
In this fascinating role with the Secret Intelligence Service, you’ll manage a portfolio of ITC Services from their inception through to decommissioning. Ideally, you’ll have the ISEB Manager’s Certificate in IT Service Management. You’ll certainly ... more >
| MI6
Proven configuration management experience and an ITIL background are essential for this role, driving forward the configuration agenda throughout the Secret Intelligence Service. Ideally, you’ll also have the ISEB Practitioner Certificates in Configuration, Change & ... more >
| MI6
If you have a CILIP recognised qualification in librarianship or information science, this fascinating role with the Secret Intelligence Service could be the perfect career move for you. From the sheer variety of subjects you ... more >
| MI6
With your customer service experience and calm, efficient approach even in the fastest moving office environment, you’re the ideal person to help Secret Intelligence Service staff with their IT problems and queries. In addition, you ... more >
More job opportunities